Child brought to hospital with worsened parkinson's symptoms, Breese IL
Heads up:
This is auto-generated from real-time dispatch calls. Information may be inaccurate. Listen to the original audio and verify critical information using official agency releases.
According to the dispatch call, a nine-year-old female with Parkinson's disease was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital. She had worse symptoms over the last day, weakness, lethargy, a high heart rate with irregular rhythm, and stable breathing. Medical staff monitored her condition as she arrived at the hospital.
Audio|Heard on: Clinton County Public Safety
Listen to dispatch call
01:7
Transcript:
00:00
Shall we send me out to St.
00:01
Joe's from the Willis? President Joe.
00:08
St.
00:13
Joe. 79-16 with an inbound patient report.
00:23
Joe, 16th century from across the street at the villa.
00:26
Short ETA, I've got a nine-year-old female.
00:27
She's A&O-time school history of Parkinson's says that Parkinson's symptoms have been worse over the last 24 hours.
00:33
Also complaining of some increased weakness in lethargy, that was concerned for hard-rate reading of the 150s and local stock readings.
00:42
Patient is A&O x4.
00:43
She has a heart rate in A-fib that varies between 80 and 100.
00:49
She does have 53 of A-Pib.
00:51
Blood pressure 140 over 19, 14-0 over 92.
00:54
Reading is only slightly labored at 20 times a minute.
00:56
Her lungs are clear, but Bullock is reading around 82 to 89.
01:01
I don't think that that reading is completely accurate.
01:04
As I said, I have A-fib on monitor.
01:05
We're arriving now.
01:06
Thank you for the order for me.
Disclaimer:
This transcript was automatically generated and may contain inaccuracies. Please verify the information independently.
Location mentioned:
Holy Cross Ln, Breese, IL 62230
This shows a Google Street View of the area near the location, which might not be the exact address.
Correct
Incorrect
Note:
Auto-generated from live dispatch audio, which may contain errors. Dispatch calls are not confirmed incidents. Always verify with official sources.