Emergency teams respond to elderly medical issues in Berkeley, Berkeley CA
Emergency medical teams responded to multiple locations in Berkeley and Oakland. The patients were elderly individuals experiencing issues such as falls, breathing difficulties, and chest pain. The responses included those to near Berkeley Way, near 28th Street, and near Armstrung Drive. Medical units were dispatched with urgency to assist these patients.
Audio|Source: Bay Area Various Public Safety
02:25
Transcript:
00:00
2-9-V.S. 174. Respond, I could 2 for 85-year-old female poll.
00:12
Engine 2, and medic size, respond to medical emergency.
00:17
At near Berkeley Way, Unit 308. Cross streets are Henry Street and Shattac Avenue.
00:24
Thank you.
00:35
Engine 13. Prock 3.
00:38
Charlie[3] response, chest pain, abnormal breathing.
00:42
910,
00:43
54th Avenue.
00:45
The company is also to (number withheld). Crozier response, chest pain 910-504th Avenue. Crosis, San Diego Street, respond to special 3.
00:53
Copy.
01:00
Engine 5. Echo[2] response, breathing problems, near 28th Street, Unit LWR.
01:13
5-5-9.
01:17
ELS-131.
01:21
Over fire, truck six.
01:23
Work service, C.F,
01:26
terminated, Aventile off command,
01:27
releasing TACU.
01:29
Open response, medic, 356, code the response, breathing problems.
01:32
12, 4, 6, near 28th Street, respond to 5.3.
01:36
131.5,000. Truck 6 and service, C.F., releasing TAC2.
01:44
Copy 131, thank you. Clearing you off.
01:49
I'll go to (number withheld), 62-year-old patient code 3, chestings.
01:54
Okay.
01:56
Okay.
01:57
I'll go to 555. You were low-law.
02:01
Covering response to the S-173. Code 2[1] response for a fall near Armstrung Drive. Cross the Tubman Drive, respond to dispatch three.
02:10
Okay, responding code 3 for chestings,
02:13
62-year-old.
02:16
Yes.
02:18
35-ZERA.
02:20
131-EOR.
02:22
8356 responding code 3, echo level difficulty breathing.
Police codes explained
The following codes appeared in the transcript and are explained below:
[1]
Code 2: Urgent, expedited response without lights or siren; proceed promptly while obeying all traffic laws.
[2]
Echo: Highest-priority medical emergency requiring immediate response to life-threatening conditions.
[3]
Charlie: Moderate-priority response code, often used for medium-urgency medical or incident dispatch situations.
Disclaimer:
This transcript was automatically generated and may contain inaccuracies. Please verify the information independently.
