Patient with chest pain taken to St. John Hospital, Detroit MI
Please note:
This is not an official report. The headline and summary are generated by automated AI systems from public-safety dispatch audio. Always verify with official sources.
As discussed during the dispatch call, emergency medical personnel transported a 44-year-old woman to St. John Hospital after she experienced shortness of breath and chest pain that had persisted since early morning. Her vital signs were recorded, and oxygen was administered for comfort. The incident appears to be a routine medical emergency response.
Audio|Heard on: Wayne MI Hospital Group Calls
Listen to dispatch call
00:56
Transcript:
00:00
St. John, St.
00:01
John's Bravo Medic Fifty Two, Priority Two Medical.
00:03
How do you copy?
00:07
Bravo Fifty Two to St.
00:08
John, go ahead.
00:11
Good morning, St.
00:12
John Brown Medic Fifty Two.
00:13
Priority Two Medical with a forty-four year old female.
00:16
Chief complaint is going to be shortness of breath and chest pain.
00:19
Patient states the chest pain is in the center of her chest.
00:22
It's been going on since about 0400 a.m. this morning.
00:25
Vitals are as is.
00:26
Oh, she says it gets worse as she takes more oxygen.
00:28
Deep breath, bothers her as it is.
00:30
Blood pressure 172 over 100.
00:33
Heart rate of eighty-nine, ninety-six percent on room air.
00:37
But I put her on some oxygen for comfort and per request.
00:41
Blood sugar rate 17.
00:42
Her blood sugar is 108, 108.
00:44
Eight hundred and four GCS 13.
00:46
If we don't see further, we're like 4 min out.
00:50
Nothing further was seen arrival at the hospital.
00:53
Thank you fifty-two clear.
Disclaimer:
This transcript is automatically generated by AI from live dispatch audio. Dispatch communications may include background noise, overlapping speakers, or rapidly evolving situations, and automated transcription may not capture all details or context.
Note:
Auto-generated from live dispatch audio, which may contain errors. Dispatch calls are not confirmed incidents. Always verify with official sources.
