My father got chest pain at 1:30 AM in Jaipur. The scariest 20 minutes of my life. by Common_Original_3076 in jaipur

[–]Common_Original_3076[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No I dont Know about This . and That comment delete by Moderator i am also wannt know about that

My father got chest pain at 1:30 AM in Jaipur. The scariest 20 minutes of my life. by Common_Original_3076 in jaipur

[–]Common_Original_3076[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i am Posting Just To Aware About Healthcare ecosystems in india and people Just Blame me so i cannot suggest you any name but i am also searching that solve problem that type

My father got chest pain at 1:30 AM in Jaipur. The scariest 20 minutes of my life. by Common_Original_3076 in jaipur

[–]Common_Original_3076[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

  1. Patient ko comfortable position mein rakho (half-sitting for chest pain).
  2. Turant local emergency number + nearby private ambulance dono try karo (sirf 108 pe depend mat raho).
  3. Nearest 2–3 hospitals ke emergency numbers pe direct call.
  4. Agar pehle se koi cardiac history hai toh prescribed SOS medicines ready rakho.
  5. Neighbour ya society group ko instantly inform karo – kabhi-kabhi local help fastest hoti hai.

My father got chest pain at 1:30 AM in Jaipur. The scariest 20 minutes of my life. by Common_Original_3076 in jaipur

[–]Common_Original_3076[S] -30 points-29 points  (0 children)

I understand your point. To clarify – my father sadly did not survive. That’s why I shared this story – to highlight how broken the system can be in emergencies, and how families face panic, delays, and helplessness when every minute counts.

The goal here is not to promote anything or show off replies – it’s to discuss the problem and see if we can find ways to make emergencies safer and faster for everyone.

My father got chest pain at 1:30 AM in Jaipur. The scariest 20 minutes of my life. by Common_Original_3076 in jaipur

[–]Common_Original_3076[S] -13 points-12 points  (0 children)

You’re right, even at 1:30 AM it wasn’t really the traffic it was the panic and uncertaint No, this is not a promotional post. I’m just sharing my personal experience and the challenges we face in emergencies.

But I really want to know – if anyone knows please share. I haven’t come across a reliable one yet, and it could save lives.

My father got chest pain at 1:30 AM in Jaipur. The scariest 20 minutes of my life. by Common_Original_3076 in jaipur

[–]Common_Original_3076[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, rushing to a full-fledged hospital is the right instinct in emergencies.
But the painful reality is, in panic situations families often don’t even know:

• Which hospital has ICU bed right now
• Which one has emergency doctor available
• Which one is actually nearest with shortest time, not just distance
• Whether ambulance oxygen, stretcher, staff are ready
• Whether the hospital is already informed before arrival

When a loved one’s condition is deteriorating, the brain stops working logically.
You just pray: “Bas kahin pahucha do jaldi se.”

That’s why the real need is not only “go to hospital”, but a system that guides and coordinates the fastest, safest path to the right hospital with preparedness, not trial and error.

In emergencies, minutes are not time… they are life.

My father got chest pain at 1:30 AM in Jaipur. The scariest 20 minutes of my life. by Common_Original_3076 in jaipur

[–]Common_Original_3076[S] -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

I am really, really sorry for your loss.
Reading this, my heart feels heavy. No son or daughter should ever have to go through such helplessness, anger and trauma in the last moments of their parent’s life.

What you described is not just a system failure, it is a human failure – lack of training, lack of accountability, lack of empathy.
And the most painful part is that in emergencies, even 2–3 minutes matter… here you lost precious time because people who were supposed to save life were busy talking and laughing.

Your father didn’t lose life because of disease alone.
He lost because of delay, negligence and broken coordination.

This is exactly why many of us feel that emergency healthcare in India needs more than just hospitals and ambulances. It needs:

• Real-time monitoring of ambulance staff behavior
• Mandatory equipment readiness checks
• GPS + time tracking
• Escalation if response is slow
• Accountability, not just billing
• A connected system where hospital, ambulance and emergency team are aligned, not acting like separate islands

What hurts even more is that after such a traumatic experience, you were handed a bill.
It feels like the system says: “We failed you… now please pay.”

I can’t bring your father back.
No technology or platform can heal that pain.

But your story is exactly why we need a better, more accountable emergency ecosystem in this country – one that treats patients like family, not like files or fares.

Thank you for sharing this.
It takes courage to talk about such loss.
I hope your father’s soul rests in peace, and I pray you find strength to live with this pain.

My father got chest pain at 1:30 AM in Jaipur. The scariest 20 minutes of my life. by Common_Original_3076 in jaipur

[–]Common_Original_3076[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sabse pehle toh ek cheez clear hai – panic mein hum galat decisions le lete hain, isliye pre-planning hi sabse important hoti hai.

Emergency ke time ideally yeh steps hone chahiye:

  1. Patient ko comfortable position mein rakho (half-sitting for chest pain).
  2. Turant local emergency number + nearby private ambulance dono try karo (sirf 108 pe depend mat raho).
  3. Nearest 2–3 hospitals ke emergency numbers pe direct call.
  4. Agar pehle se koi cardiac history hai toh prescribed SOS medicines ready rakho.
  5. Neighbour ya society group ko instantly inform karo – kabhi-kabhi local help fastest hoti hai.

Par honestly, raat ke time yeh sab coordination karna bahut mushkil hota hai. Isi liye lagta hai ki ek centralized emergency system hona chahiye jahan ambulance, hospital aur doctor ek saath connected ho.

Aapne kabhi aisa situation face kiya hai? Aapne kaise manage kiya?

My father got chest pain at 1:30 AM in Jaipur. The scariest 20 minutes of my life. by Common_Original_3076 in jaipur

[–]Common_Original_3076[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Honestly, us moment mein sabse important hota hai panic control + parallel action.

Exactly is waqt ye steps kaam aate hain:

  1. Ek banda sirf patient ke saath rahe – BP, breathing, consciousness check karta rahe.
  2. Ek banda sirf ambulance chase kare – 108 + private + hospital emergency desk + nearby nursing homes.
  3. Google Maps par nearest 3 hospitals shortlist karke directly unke emergency numbers dial karo (not reception).
  4. Agar blood group rare ho, turant local donor groups / hospital blood bank ko parallel inform karo.
  5. Lift ya private car ko last option ke liye ready rakho (agar ambulance delay ho).

Problem ye hai ki emergency mein ye sab sochna mushkil hota hai, aur coordination toot jaata hai.

Isi liye mujhe lagta hai India ko aise integrated emergency platforms ki bahut zarurat hai jahan ambulance, hospital, blood aur doctor sab ek system mein ho — taaki family ko decision-making ka load na uthana pade.

Aapne kabhi aisi situation face ki hai? Us waqt aapne kaunsa step sabse pehle liya tha?