Upset with myself and thinking about what I should have done has made me realize that the first step is knowing the emergency numbers in Switzerland. Hopefully you won't need them, but I'm posting them here:
Ambulance: 144
Police: 117
Upset with myself and thinking about what I should have done has made me realize that the first step is knowing the emergency numbers in Switzerland. Hopefully you won't need them, but I'm posting them here:
Ambulance: 144
Police: 117
Other emergency numbers in Swissieland:
118 Fire department
1414 REGA (air rescue)
140 Auto club
145 Poison control / toxicological emergencies
147 Youth and Adolescent emergencies (running out of Red Bull or cigarettes while waiting for the night bus doesn't count)
143 The helping hand (probably not janitor services)
Enough first aid to know what to do/not to do, would be ideal.
In a city you can hope someone more qualified will step in but in a secluded area it could mean life or death to someone.
Not sure if "civilized" or "keystone cops" applies to Swissieland, but I would certainly hope so. Maybe our resident Swiss citizen, moderator and emergency services expert will chime in?
(hmm, would I label what some of my local co-workers speak as English or Swinglish?)
You learn how to ascertain situations, apply ABC schemes (thus you would have carefully turned him over, checked consciousness, breathing, call 112, then put him in a stable side position after checking the bleeding), you also learn how to give CPR and use a defilibrator, AND you learn how to save people from the water.
I was in a group with 12 girls aged 20-22, and we were nicknamed the baywatch team . This was in Bern by the way.
website is http://www.slrg.ch/de.html
Note you can change the language of the site, and you can also look up the local clubs in Romandie.
I've been involved in a few emergencies in Switzerland, and I've always found the Swiss to be very helpful and competent. It seems that being able to help breaks through their normal reserve.
Maybe we should organize an English first aid course for EF members? Many moons ago I had an instructor license for that kind of stuff ...
San Arena in Zuri offers such a course in English (with a not-so-well-versed-in-English Scandinavian instructor), but they charge a pretty penny for it.
Bascially if you are able to give an address, they will come!
Hence the rule for any emergency call is to ALWAYS start with the location of the emergency.
Didn't I post that 5 dubyah scheme somewhere?
(headscratch)
A first aid course would be great - I am due for an 'upgrade' and it would be good to do one with someone who has local knowledge to share...
Looking back, it was really quite comical. But at the moment it was a bit upsetting.
After thinking about what happened yesterday, I think that I didn't react as I normally would have because I kept waiting for the three Swiss people to take the lead in caring for the man. Also, I felt immobilized because I couldn't remember any of the necessary medical words in French.
There are some considerations to combine the police, ambulance and fire emergency numbers sometime in the 2010s, probably under the GSM emergency number 112. Such an infrastructure would possibly cover foreign languages better.
All in all, English assistance is not a given. Also in other first world countries, it has recently been pointed out to me that the police's operators in Lithuania don't speak English either.
What I didn't know is that the ability to call 112 from a cell phone without SIM card was deactivated briefly after it was introduced first in 2000. I wonder if it works now? (No invitation to try it of course)
Some related reading material in German and English:
112 without SIM:
http://www.comcom.admin.ch/aktuell/0...de&msg-id=2285
http://www.comcom.admin.ch/aktuell/0...en&msg-id=2282
http://www.comcom.admin.ch/aktuell/0...de&msg-id=2281
Caller location:
From Bradt Guide to Switzerland. I don't know if they can offer advice or support in the event of an emergency.
First of all I think it should be mandatory for every single human being (especially if you have kids) to have full knowledge of first aid. Not just CPR, but the extra stuff about bleeding, fractures, burns etc. Once you have done the course you will feel guilty that you haven't done it years ago.
But even if you haven't, gosh you are a human being - HELP ANOTHER!!
I was very perplexed as to what to do with him, so I wound up letting him go. As a matter of fact, I gave him a hat that he had taken a liking to.