Woman with chest pain taken to UW East, Madison WI
Please note:
This is not an official report. The headline and summary are generated by automated AI systems from public-safety dispatch audio. Always verify with official sources.
As discussed during the dispatch call, paramedics transported a 68-year-old woman to UW East Hospital after she reported severe chest pain. She had a history of sepsis, atrial fibrillation, and a recent hospitalization. The patient refused certain medications en route, but her vital signs were stable upon transport.
Audio|Heard on: Dane WI Hospital Group Calls
Listen to dispatch call
01:10
Transcript:
00:00
UW East from Medic 5.
00:03
This is UW East, go ahead.
00:06
Medic 5 is en route to your facility, about 8 minutes out with a 68-year-old female patient.
00:11
Our chief complaint today was nine-out-of-ten chest pain and not feeling well.
00:17
She recently got out of the hospital.
00:20
She has sepsis, atrial fibrillation, and a UTI diagnosis.
00:25
Are you still on antibiotics for all those?
00:28
Again, just kind of not feeling well.
00:30
This chest pain started last night and has gotten worse today.
00:33
Took a 12-lead since over to your location.
00:36
She appears to be in AFib.
00:37
She has had AFib in the past and has been in it since the hospital visit.
00:43
Unable to get an IV at this time.
00:46
Patient refused aspirin and norepinephrine.
00:52
Current vitals: heart rate 80, blood pressure 132 over 82.
00:56
SpO2 is 97% on room air, and blood sugar was 140.
01:02
What other comments or questions do you have before our arrival?
01:06
We'll be on arrival.
01:07
East Madison clear.
01:09
Ten five copies. Thanks.
Disclaimer:
This transcript is automatically generated by AI from live dispatch audio. Dispatch communications may include background noise, overlapping speakers, or rapidly evolving situations, and automated transcription may not capture all details or context.
Note:
Auto-generated from live dispatch audio, which may contain errors. Dispatch calls are not confirmed incidents. Always verify with official sources.
