Guidelines when making a 999 call to the Ambulance Service

Medical Priority Dispatch System (MPDS) requires the ambulance service call handler to ask you a systematized series of key questions. These questions allow the system to categorize the call by the chief complaint (What is wrong with the patient). The 999 call is then automatically categorized as to the level of response by the ambulance service.

 

Guidelines when making 999 Call


You will be asked the following:

1. Case Entry ¬- Telephone number and location of incident.
                       The Emergency Medical Dispatcher (EMD) will ask you to verify these to ensure they
                       have the correct information and an ambulance can be dispatched at this point in
                       order to save time.

                       The Chief Complaint. (What is wrong?)
                       Age of the patient
                       Is he/she conscious?
                       Is he/she breathing?

2. Key
   Questions -    These are questions relevant to the Chief Complaint of the patient.
                       (If you are unsure or do not know the answer it is not a problem and will not delay
                       the ambulance).

3. In case of illness (Patients over 35 years)
                       Is there any chest pain?

4. In cases of accident or injury
                       Is there any severe bleeding?

5. Post-dispatch Instructions
                       These are given if appropriate at the end of the call to advice the caller what they
                       can do to help the patient if they are not a qualified First Aider or Medical
                       Professional.

6. Pre-arrival Instructions
                       These are protocol driven instructions given for life-threatening emergencies until
                       the arrival of the ambulance.

The EMD (Emergency Medical Dispatcher) will also require a rendezvous point from you where the ambulance will be met and directed to the patient.

What were your experiences of this system when you needed to dialed 999 for an ambulance?

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