Medical emergency for woman with nosebleed on blood thinners, Greentown IN
Heads up: This post was detected from real-time dispatch audio. Information may be incomplete, and the situation may evolve. Always verify using official agency releases.
Emergency responders treated a woman near County Rd E 100 S in Greentown who had an active nosebleed while on blood thinners. She recently had a cardiac event, and responders advised her not to blow her nose for a long time due to the bleeding risk.
Audio|Heard on: Kokomo Police and Fire, Howard County Sheriff / Fire Dispatch
Listen to dispatch call
02:27
Transcript:
00:00
Howard Medic and Greentown first responders, Howard Medic, Greentown first responders, near County Rd E 100 S.
00:13
Near County Rd E 100 S for Greentown first responders and Howard Medic.
00:21
We advise Bobby.
00:23
Well, there's a lot of things.
00:28
She was going to know any welcome?
00:34
Allegedly,
00:37
she went to a woman.
00:43
22.
00:45
22.
00:48
22.
00:50
431 Kokomo signal 27, (number withheld).
01:06
305 C.
01:07
Charles, I-I-I-A-I-da, H.
01:09
Henry.
01:14
201, so if you have to tell me.
01:18
21.
01:20
28 your status.
01:27
How mad...
01:32
Vincent Boulevard in Washington.
01:38
Set 22, Medics 3 on Metro.
01:45
And it's on Broadway.
01:50
104.
01:55
Bill Higgs for 22.
01:59
Hey, be advised.
02:01
I was at that residence at 6 p.m.
02:03
right before I left Greentown.
02:05
She just had a cardiac vent place a couple of weeks ago.
02:08
The house was extremely dry.
02:10
We tried to stop the bleed kits for the nose since she's on a blood thinner, advised her not to blow her nose for an extensive amount of time, but she kept messing with the sponges that we had applied to her nose.
02:24
So just a heads up, she is on two blood thinners.
Disclaimer:
This transcript was automatically generated and may contain inaccuracies. Please verify the information independently.
Location mentioned:
County Rd E 100 S, Greentown, IN 46936
This shows a Google Street View of the area near the location, which might not be the exact address.
Correct
Incorrect
Not all dispatch calls become confirmed incidents. This reflects early radio traffic only. Treat with caution.