waltky
08-15-2005, 09:51 PM
Sticky for all forums to see?
Phone users are being encouraged to list their emergency contact under the acronym ICE
8/15/2005
A movement is underway to turn the ubiquitous cell phone into a source of information for paramedics and other emergency personnel responding to accidents, crimes and disasters.
A British paramedic came up with the idea of asking cell phone users to input an entry into their cellular phonebook called ICE for "in case of emergency." Accompanying that acronym would be the name and phone numbers of the person who should be called if something has happened to the owner of the phone.
The ICE campaign was launched in Britain in April, but people really started paying attention after the July terrorist bombings in London that killed 56 and injured hundreds.
Bob Brotchie, a Cambridge-based paramedic for 13 years, says he has responded to many accidents in which the injured person carried no information about next of kin or emergency contacts. This makes it difficult for paramedics because they don't know the patient's medical history or allergies, he says.
The British campaign, initially promoted in conjunction with Vodafone's annual Life Savers Awards, is "going phenomenally well," says Brotchie. Vodaphone is a British mobile phone company.
Now paramedics in the USA want to encourage ICE usage by Americans. "I certainly think it can help," says Matthew Levy of the International Association of EMTs and Paramedics. "(We are) hoping that we can get people excited."
More (http://www.usatoday.com/tech/wireless/phones/2005-08-15-ice-cell-phone_x.htm?csp=N007&RM_Exclude=Juno)
Phone users are being encouraged to list their emergency contact under the acronym ICE
8/15/2005
A movement is underway to turn the ubiquitous cell phone into a source of information for paramedics and other emergency personnel responding to accidents, crimes and disasters.
A British paramedic came up with the idea of asking cell phone users to input an entry into their cellular phonebook called ICE for "in case of emergency." Accompanying that acronym would be the name and phone numbers of the person who should be called if something has happened to the owner of the phone.
The ICE campaign was launched in Britain in April, but people really started paying attention after the July terrorist bombings in London that killed 56 and injured hundreds.
Bob Brotchie, a Cambridge-based paramedic for 13 years, says he has responded to many accidents in which the injured person carried no information about next of kin or emergency contacts. This makes it difficult for paramedics because they don't know the patient's medical history or allergies, he says.
The British campaign, initially promoted in conjunction with Vodafone's annual Life Savers Awards, is "going phenomenally well," says Brotchie. Vodaphone is a British mobile phone company.
Now paramedics in the USA want to encourage ICE usage by Americans. "I certainly think it can help," says Matthew Levy of the International Association of EMTs and Paramedics. "(We are) hoping that we can get people excited."
More (http://www.usatoday.com/tech/wireless/phones/2005-08-15-ice-cell-phone_x.htm?csp=N007&RM_Exclude=Juno)