Four-year-old ingests entire bottle of melatonin, Knights Landing CA
Heads up: This post was detected from real-time dispatch audio. Information may be incomplete, and the situation may evolve. Always verify using official agency releases.
Emergency responders attended a call near Reed Street and 6th Street in Knights Landing for a four-year-old child who ingested a whole bottle of melatonin.
Audio|Heard on: Yolo County Fire Dispatch - Green
Listen to dispatch call
01:49
Transcript:
00:00
Attention Station 9, MediClaid.
00:10
Attention Station 9, MedAid at Reed Street, near 6th Street.
00:17
Edward 19, C.
00:19
Charles.
00:20
Dispatch, 900, responding.
00:27
900, I copy your respect for the medical aid[1] at 9-475-3-3-c-3.
00:31
Cross-up 6-3, Matt Page, E.
00:32
Edward 19, C.
00:33
Charles, for a four-year-old male who ate an entire bottle of melatonin.
00:42
In 1900,
00:44
correction,
00:45
900, and AMR 322.
00:47
Your calls are introduced to a co-to response by CAD.
00:53
900 copies reducing from 102 and 17.
00:59
Copy.
01:02
Fire dispatch, AMR 322 en route to Knights Landing from Woodland, confirming Code 2 response.
01:10
Hey firm, this is a Code 2 response for a 4-year-old male juvenile who ate an entire bottle of melatonin.
01:19
22 copies.
01:26
Fire dispatch, station nine, copies the call.
01:31
Station 9, I copy.
01:36
Fire dispatch, pressure 9 responding.
01:40
Press 9 to copy, responding.
01:41
It's what code do medical in 9475, reads 3.
01:44
Class of 6-3, Matt Page, E.
01:45
Edward 19, C.
01:46
Charles for a four-year-old juvenile who ate an entire bottle of melatonin.
Police codes explained
The following codes appeared in the transcript and are explained below:
[1]
medical aid: Request/transfer to emergency medical services for assistance
Disclaimer:
This transcript was automatically generated and may contain inaccuracies. Please verify the information independently.
Location mentioned:
6th St & Reed St, Knights Landing, CA 95645
This shows a Google Street View of the area near the location, which might not be the exact address.
Correct
Incorrect
Not all dispatch calls become confirmed incidents. This reflects early radio traffic only. Treat with caution.