Medical emergency at near NW 163rd Terrace, Pembroke Pines FL
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.
According to the dispatch call, a 23-year-old male passed out near NW 163rd Terrace but was conscious and breathing when first responders arrived.
Audio|Heard on: Broward County Fire/Rescue
Listen to dispatch call
02:4
Transcript:
00:00
Report, Charlie, Rescue, 34, Inchance Report.
00:02
You're responding to a passout at near NW 163rd Terrace,
00:07
near NW 163rd Terrace.
00:11
Check the MBT for permanent hazard flag, 2219.
00:17
Action 6-1 arrival, two vehicles, moderate damage, proposed.
00:22
Two vehicles, moderate damage, advising, 2220.
00:29
We're going to pack up here and we'll clear up in a second.
00:33
We'll advise when we're available.
00:37
Copy, 2220.
00:39
We can also terminate the TAC.
00:41
Thank you.
00:43
Copy. TAC one will not be available.
00:44
TAC 1 now. Available at 2220.
00:50
7 alpha medical alarms.
00:54
Zone 47 Alpha, Rescue 470, be responding to 350, Southwest 29 terrorists, reference a medical alarm.
01:06
Copy, Referex47, copy, clear?
01:09
47, copy, 407.
01:13
Copy, 247. The advisor is the audible medical alarm.
01:16
It came from the keypad, still away and further.
01:22
And now this is 2221.
01:30
So I want to an alpha pass.
01:36
You're 46A.
01:38
Confirming your own scene, it shows you staging.
01:44
If I'm a rival in the area, it's not about there.
01:48
Copy. Just be advised patient is a (name withheld) male with a pink jacket on in blue jeans.
01:54
She can respond.
01:58
First party, 23-year-old male,
02:01
feels like he's not a hostile conscious breathing.
02:02
Switch over to this batch one.
Disclaimer:
This transcript was automatically generated and may contain inaccuracies. Please verify the information independently.
Location mentioned:
NW 163rd Terrace, Pembroke Pines, FL 33028
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.