Post by sheendigs on Feb 14, 2010 18:32:28 GMT
Hi Charlie,
I hope this the right place to post this: (Sheendigs)
Two nice tips for you to send to your friends
1° For URGENCIES
The Paramedics that work everyday on the road found out that during accidents, the wounded had in nearly 70% of the cases a cell phone on them. However, during those interventions, one never knew who to contact in those long contact lists.
Paramedics just had a good idea that each one should go into each one’s repertory and enter the person to be contacted in case of a medical urgency under a special pseudonym.
This international pseudonym would be known as «ICE» = In Case of Emergency. This should have thus, the name of the person to be contacted, making it easier for the paramedics, the police, the firemen or the first to be contacted in which case one could use ICE1, ICE2, ICE3, and so on....
Easy to do, does not cost anything and can help a lot! If you believe in the utility of this convention, just forward this message so that this becomes one of the top priority in our every day lives”
2° Cerebrovascular Accident (CVA)
This should be useful service to render !
Please read those instructions and perhaps you will save the life of somebody and help everyone know the danger that is a CVA. Julie was at a barbecue and she stumbled and fell down. She asserted everybody that she was well and that she had stumbled because of her new shoes. Her friends helped her in sitting down and brought her a plate with nourishments. Altough she was a bit shaken, she had a wonderful evening. Later on, her husband phoned everyone of her friends to let them know that she had been rushed to the hospital...Julie died at 18 :00 .
She had suffered a CVA during the barbecue. If anyone there had been able to identify the signs of this accident, she could have been saved. The emergency physician said that if he had been able to have a CVA victim in the three hours following the attack, he could have reversed the effects of this crisis..
He confirms that it rather difficult to identify CAV, and a diagnostic and that the patient be treated in less than three hours by a physician.
Here is how you recognised the symptoms of a CVA :
Just ask these three simple questions to the person having this crisis:
1. Tell the person to SMILE.
2. Tell the person to raise BOTH OF HER ARMS.
3. Tell the person to repeat a VERY SIMPLE PHRASE (ex.. The sun is shining wonderfully today).
If this person has difficulty in executing one of these above, call your emergency phone number and describe these symptoms to the dispatcher.
According to a cardiologist, if you forward this message to everyone you know, at least one life could be saved per day.
I hope this the right place to post this: (Sheendigs)
Two nice tips for you to send to your friends
1° For URGENCIES
The Paramedics that work everyday on the road found out that during accidents, the wounded had in nearly 70% of the cases a cell phone on them. However, during those interventions, one never knew who to contact in those long contact lists.
Paramedics just had a good idea that each one should go into each one’s repertory and enter the person to be contacted in case of a medical urgency under a special pseudonym.
This international pseudonym would be known as «ICE» = In Case of Emergency. This should have thus, the name of the person to be contacted, making it easier for the paramedics, the police, the firemen or the first to be contacted in which case one could use ICE1, ICE2, ICE3, and so on....
Easy to do, does not cost anything and can help a lot! If you believe in the utility of this convention, just forward this message so that this becomes one of the top priority in our every day lives”
2° Cerebrovascular Accident (CVA)
This should be useful service to render !
Please read those instructions and perhaps you will save the life of somebody and help everyone know the danger that is a CVA. Julie was at a barbecue and she stumbled and fell down. She asserted everybody that she was well and that she had stumbled because of her new shoes. Her friends helped her in sitting down and brought her a plate with nourishments. Altough she was a bit shaken, she had a wonderful evening. Later on, her husband phoned everyone of her friends to let them know that she had been rushed to the hospital...Julie died at 18 :00 .
She had suffered a CVA during the barbecue. If anyone there had been able to identify the signs of this accident, she could have been saved. The emergency physician said that if he had been able to have a CVA victim in the three hours following the attack, he could have reversed the effects of this crisis..
He confirms that it rather difficult to identify CAV, and a diagnostic and that the patient be treated in less than three hours by a physician.
Here is how you recognised the symptoms of a CVA :
Just ask these three simple questions to the person having this crisis:
1. Tell the person to SMILE.
2. Tell the person to raise BOTH OF HER ARMS.
3. Tell the person to repeat a VERY SIMPLE PHRASE (ex.. The sun is shining wonderfully today).
If this person has difficulty in executing one of these above, call your emergency phone number and describe these symptoms to the dispatcher.
According to a cardiologist, if you forward this message to everyone you know, at least one life could be saved per day.