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I thought something might be up, so I left money on the counter, went outside and dialed 911 on my cell. There was nobody in the store and one of the aisles had a bunch of merchandise on the floor. I pumped my gas and then went inside to pay. One night, very late, I stopped for gas at a convenience store on a lonely highway.
#Corebreach myspace movie#
We did the last week of the movie in Northern Maine and there was no reason to change phones. In the early 90's I was working on a movie in Duluth, MN, so I had a cell phone with a Duluth Area Code. May you always have what you need to do your jobs, and the respect you deserve! Those EMTs saved my wife's life, so I raise a glass to them and all emergency workers everywhere. Once I got to the hospital (not being willing to drive 80 on an unfamiliar road and possibly make the ambulance come back for a second trip) I discovered that she had a broken pelvis, and that her blood pressure had suddenly taken a sharp drop halfway to the hospital. Out here in Oregon, people are usually pretty good about that. That was a scary moment, but I was glad to see other cars actually getting out of the way. Since her injury didn't seem life-threatening at first, the EMTs just C-spined and backboarded her as a precaution and drove off at normal highway speed with me following in the car halfway to the hospital they suddenly flipped on the siren and sped up to 80mph. Even though this was way out in the boonies, the local ambulance service was there in just a few minutes. In late May my wife was thrown from a horse into a steel fence. I don't know that I'll ever see its like again. I am amazed at seeing well over a hundred cars participate in this effort to get someone to the hospital. The ambulance comes by half on the left shoulder and half in the left lane, and makes slow but steady progress all the way down. I was in the left lane, and we all pull over so we're half in the right lane and half in the left lane. But.everybody - and I mean everybody - in the right lane pulls over so they're half on the right shoulder and half in the right lane. An ambulance comes up behind us, because the same exit is for Shock Trauma. "Wow," says my friend visiting from Brooklyn, "cars are actually getting out of its way."Ģ) I'm taking I-95 into the city the very long exit ramp is a two-lane parking lot, the product of having the Inner Harbor and the baseball stadium both at the end of it.
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#Corebreach myspace drivers#
An ambulance is working its way down a busy street, with a few drivers making half-hearted attempts to clear a path. Two getting-out-of-the-way-of-ambulance stories:ġ) Walking through downtown Baltimore, I hear sirens. Call them at need, and let the vehicles by if someone else has done so. It’s also appropriate to remind everyone reading this that the emergency number, and the services it reaches, are there for a reason. I, for one, would like to take this numerically convenient moment to thank him for what he does in that role, both online and in the all too real world. Regular readers of this blog are of course aware that Jim Macdonald is an emergency medical technician. And although the history of the ambulance is much more gradual, civilian emergency medicine and transport seems to have been an innovation of the 1800’s. Sir Robert Peel is credited with establishing the Metropolitan Police in London in 1829.
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According to Wikipedia, the first organized municipal fire brigade was established in Edinburgh in 1824. Universal public emergency services of are surprisingly recent in the history of urban living. (Of course, there may be other problems once you reach the emergency services number, but that is out of the scope of this discussion.) It is also the worldwide emergency number from GSM mobile phones, redirecting to the local emergency number depending on location. 112 is the Europe-wide emergency telephone number, supplanting or supplementing (in the case of the UK, which still uses 999 as well) earlier emergency numbers.