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ICE (In Case of Emergency) your cellphone or PDA to help emergency responders

Summit training has a great PDF on ICE (In Case of Emergency). I think it is a great idea and could save lives and help emergency responders tremendously.ICE - In Case of Emergency
Programming of Emergency Contact Numbers in your PDA's or Cell Phones
ICE – In Case of Emergency - programming of your cell phones with ICE is a concept that was developed by a paramedic in England. It was realized that most of his victims did not carry emergency contact information but did carry cell phones. So the campaign started was to get people who carry cell phones to put in a listing of ICE in their cell phone directory with a number that should be called In Case of an Emergency.
With over 190 million cell phone users in the United States, this could be very valuable to a lot of people in times of an emergency.
It is simple to do. First type the acronym ICE in your contact directory of your cell phone then the phone number of the person to be contacted in an emergency.
It has also been suggested that you add a period at the beginning of the acronym. This puts the listing first on the directory list. Thus .ice this also makes it quick for you to call this number since on most cell phones - after you push the Phonebook button the first entry is highlighted and ready for you to push the send button to make the call.
Some individuals like to add the name of the person after the ICE acronym. Thus, if someone wanted Bob to be called in an emergency, the contact listing might look like: ice-bob
A number of public safety agencies here in the United States are training their first responders to look for the ICE acronym in the cell phones of those that are not able to tell the first responder who to call In Case of an Emergency.
It has been proven that the ability to get vital health and medical information about a victim can be very important in how paramedics may treat someone who is unconscious.
The use of ICE for children can be very important because most do not carry wallets that would provide other important contact information. An ICE-mom or ICE-dad could be very important in providing this emergency contact.
Lastly, include ICE Poison Control phone numbers into your Plateau Wireless cell phone in case a family member, friend, pet or someone ingests some form of Poison. The Poison control phone number is 1-800-222-1222 or for your pet it is 1-888-426-4435.

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I've heard about ICE and programmed it, but I never thought about the poison control numbers. How very wonderful of an idea. Thanks for sharing. I'm going to go program more numbers in my phone now. :)
Dawn
This is really a good information. Keep it up Ken! and we expect more to come from you.
Keeping important info readily available is important, but it is also important to do it in such a way that the first responders can do something with it.
Check with your local EMS people and see what they recommend in your area. Wallet cards are often the top recommendation since looking in your wallet or for an emergency ID tag is usually one of the first things that happens at an accident scene (by the people not directly involved in the care).
I asked some locals about ICE and they said 'what?' One had heard of it but had never seen it in use.
On the other hand- pretty much ANYTHING can help- do the ICE bit, do the ICE wallet/pursue cards, put stickers on your cell phone. Anything we can do to help lessen the confusion and problems in an emergency situation is a good thing!

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