Elderly woman with suspected gastrointestinal bleeding, Temecula CA
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, an eighty-year-old woman was transported from a private residence near Temecula Parkway to Temecula Valley Hospital after experiencing nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and possible gastrointestinal bleeding. Paramedics noted dark stools and suspected internal bleeding. Vital signs were stable, with no critical heart abnormalities observed.
Audio|Heard on: San Diego CA Hospital Group Calls
Listen to dispatch call
01:5
Transcript:
00:00
Palomar Medic 113, we have a CAD number of (number withheld).
00:07
It's going to be for an 80-year-old female en route to Temecula Valley, mild status, ETA approximately 20 minutes.
00:13
Let me know when you're ready for report.
00:16
I apologize, it was chief complaint of nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain.
00:21
A private residence found our patient, an eighty-year-old female coming out to meet us at the ambulance.
00:25
Sounds like the patient over the last couple days has had dark tarry stools.
00:33
Reports that she believes there to be blood in her stools.
00:38
Sounds like the bowel pain as a result.
00:42
Mild nausea as far as the patient's vital signs.
00:47
Heart rate is currently ninety-five.
00:50
We did notice when we placed the patient on the monitor that she was having bigeminal PACs.
00:55
That run has since ended.
00:57
We took the twelve lead, no ST elevation, depression, or XB noted on the twelve lead.
01:02
Patient being chest pain.
01:04
Other than that, patient.
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.
