Multiple medical emergencies and vehicle crash reported, Charlotte NC


Multiple medical emergencies including a motor vehicle accident and a routine hemorrhage call were reported near East Independence Boulevard and Paul Duck Boulevard. Emergency units were dispatched to several locations, including medical holds and alarms. There was no sign of criminal activity during these incidents.
Audio|Source: Charlotte and Mecklenburg County Fire
02:42
Transcript:
00:00
Engine 12, NVA Medical Hold, near East Woodlawn Road.
00:05
Engine 12, NVA Medical Hold, near East Woodlawn Road.
00:14
Blond, Engine 12. Blonde engine 12.
00:21
Engine 8, V.A.
00:23
Medic Hold, East Independence Boulevard and Paul Duck Boulevard. Engine 8.M.A.
00:28
Medical Hold.
00:29
East Independence Boulevard and Paul Duck Boulevard.
00:37
Sir, not yet.
00:38
If you want us to head that way.
00:43
Yeah, if you would, you cruise up now.
00:46
All right one on the other side of us. You can see anything.
00:52
And four, we're headed there now.
00:58
Engine 2 central.
01:02
Engine 10, a known medical medic hole, near each nut road. Engine 10, a known medical medic hold, near each nut road.
01:16
Cornelis, copy, clear, medic 9, you can cancel.
01:20
Medic 9 is right, thank you.
01:29
Engine 8, we're sending 42 from the opposite direction, just advise if you need on.
01:42
Engine 42, MedicRoutine MVA[1], East Independence Boulevard and Paul Duck Boulevard.
01:48
Honey,
01:49
Echo[2]. Engine 42, Metacroutine MVA[1], East Independence Boulevard and Paul Duck Boulevard. Honey, Echo.
02:01
It's coming in as an iPhone crash notification.
02:09
Lawton engine 10.
02:14
Okay,
02:17
alarm. TMP to receive this as a medical and police alarm, they are en route.
02:30
Letter 40, netic routine hemorrhage, near the-plate place, on B, Bravo.
02:36
Letter 40, neta-routine hemorrhage, near the-plate place, on B, Bravo.
Police codes explained
The following codes appeared in the transcript and are explained below:
[1]
MVA: Collision or accident involving one or more motor vehicles.
[2]
Echo: Highest-priority response for life-threatening or time-critical medical emergencies.
Disclaimer:
This transcript was automatically generated and may contain inaccuracies. Please verify the information independently.