In an emergency, the first minute is a bridge between chaos and help. Your job is not to become a doctor. Your job is to stay safe, call the right number, and give clear information that helps trained responders find the scene fast.
Lead with location: school name, street, building entrance, landmark, or GPS pin. A perfect medical description is useless if help cannot find you.
Say what happened in one sentence: “A student collapsed and is not responding,” or “There is heavy bleeding from the arm.” Short, concrete details help dispatchers act.
Put the phone on speaker if you can. The dispatcher may coach you while someone else gets an adult, opens a gate, or clears space.
Never film an emergency for attention. Protect privacy, create space, and stay with the person if it is safe until help arrives.
Emergency systems are designed around fast, accurate information. Clear location plus a brief description can shorten the time between the call and professional care.
During sports practice, a classmate suddenly drops to the ground. The gym gets loud. One person is recording. No adult is beside the student yet.
Create a phone note called “Emergency info” with your home address, school address, and one nearby landmark for each.
Write a 15-second emergency script: who you are, where you are, what happened, and what you need.
Turn the lesson into a one-minute plan. Your note stays only on this device.
What do you actually see, hear, or know in this scenario? Stick to the facts.
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