Anonymous wrote:You will be seen faster if arriving by ambulance.
Anonymous wrote:911 most definitly. You get to skip the line when you come in an ambulance. If you are near a busy hospital like Fairfax, you can sit in the waiting room for 8 hours with a broken leg.
I have made too many trips by ambulance lately...and more to the ER...
There are three reasons to go buy ambulance:
1) you are alone in an emergency...for me, this was a house fire where I was burned trying to put it out...I needed medical care. The ambulance came with the fire trucks...I thought about just having my wife drive, but they were already there...
--triage at the hospital put me in a low priority group.
2) Passed out during a stress test....coded (no heart beat for 20 seconds). I was not given a choice...
--triage put me in the highest priority...and I stayed a week.
3) Passed out in the middle of the night with severe abdominal cramping, broke my nose on the impact...rule of thumb....if you wake up on the floor in a pool of blood call 911...(FWIW, they did not find the cause of the cramping, but did discover I had cancer).
--hospital was empty, so they took me right in..no wait for anything.
Non-911 trips...
1) Christmas day, so urgent care not open....fell on Ice down a set out outdoor stairs, cracked a rib. I knew something was wrong. I could drive, and drove myself to the ER.
2) Post surgery, wound opened up (part 1)....
3) Post surgery, would became infected after 3 or 4 weeks...went to urgent care first, they could not handle it -- like oh my god...this is horrible...at ER, was told no big deal, but it was appropriate.
911 is appropriate if it is a potentially life threatening incident.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in MoCo and the average ambulance (basic life support, not advanced life support) response time is well under 6 minutes all over the County. If I lived somewhere were response times were longer and/or not reliable, I'd probably drive, depending on the injury/illness.
Anonymous wrote:It really depends on a situation. If it's a broken bone or something that is not life threatening, I'd drive or cab. Life threatening situations, always call 911. You might want to consider that they will bill YOU for the ambulance ride if it's not life threatening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:911 most definitly. You get to skip the line when you come in an ambulance. If you are near a busy hospital like Fairfax, you can sit in the waiting room for 8 hours with a broken leg.
See, I wouldn't call 911 for a broken leg. Unless I had no way of getting to treatment on my own (no one to give me a ride) -- I'd expect to get to have to get myself or my family member to the hospital with broken bones.
Suspected broken neck or back -- I'd call 911.
Gunshot wound? I keep thinking of that Beltway Sniper victim -- the kid who was shot outside of his school. I think it was his aunt with him, and she picked him up and drove him ASAP to the hospital and that very likely saved his life versus waiting for the ambulance to get there. (But they were close)
Anonymous wrote:Is one better, safer, etc. than the other? Or do you think it depends on the situation?
pAnonymous wrote:I'd call 911. Even with a broken bone, if it was my daughter, I don't think I'd be able to drive safely with her wailing. And strap her into her car seat? Fuggedaboudit.