In the early morning, after 120 was connected, no one answered, only the sound of rapid breathing.

First responders carried out a blanket search overnight and successfully rescued

  Wuhan Evening News (Reporter Wu Ye Correspondent Luo Shuangping) In the early morning, after 120 was connected, no one answered, only the sound of rapid breathing was heard. The first aid personnel launched a carpet search with a vague positioning information, and finally succeeded in rescue.

  At 0:31 a.m. on September 29, in the 120 command and dispatch hall of the Wuhan Emergency Center, the phone rang rapidly, and the operator Shi Changrun answered it quickly. There was only a woman's rapid gasp from the other end of the phone.

During the call, the call was suddenly interrupted, and the operator could only locate an approximate location through the mobile phone number - a certain community on the Stadium Street in Jiang'an District.

  Afterwards, Shi Changrun called back many times, but because the other party set up call forwarding, he finally contacted a non-local friend of the caller.

This non-local friend said that he has not been to Wuhan for many years, and now he only remembers the general characteristics of the home of the caller. There is a row of bicycle parking sheds after entering the community, and the patient lives in 402 in the adjacent building.

  According to this vague address information, the 120 Command and Dispatch Center dispatched vehicles from the Guanghua Road First Aid Station nearby to perform first aid tasks.

The ambulance galloped all the way and arrived at the incident community at 0:52, accompanied by a driver, a doctor, a nurse and two stretchers.

  The emergency doctor Zhang Kuanxin recalled that this was an old community. With the assistance of the property and the police at the police station, everyone successfully found the bicycle shed.

However, the building next to the carport has a total of 6 unit doors. Which unit is 402?

Without clearer information, everyone just split up and confirmed door-to-door.

  Ten minutes later, everyone returned downstairs to meet up and looked at each other in dismay. It was verified that none of the 402 residents in the 6 units had called 120.

  "We considered at the time that the information provided by the friend of the caller was likely to be biased." Zhang Kuanxin said, in desperation, everyone had to start a carpet search for all the residents on the fourth floor of the 6 units.

  In the middle of the night, most of the residents were already asleep, and the staff went from house to house to visit, and patiently explained the work.

We knocked on a total of 20 households, and narrowed the scope of investigation to 3 households that did not respond.

At this time, an unusual detail caught the attention of the on-site staff-no one opened the door in Room 404 of Unit 2, but there was a faint light under the crack of the door, and it was confirmed that the light was on from the downstairs.

  Could this be where the caller lives?

While the on-site personnel were looking for the patient, the 120 command and dispatch center was also constantly trying to get in touch with the caller. The operator called back the call many times and contacted the caller's friends from other places.

The other party provided an important piece of information. Many advertising labels were posted on the patient's entrance door, and the lock cylinder was a "cross hole".

According to the on-site comparison of the staff, all the characteristics of Room 404 in Unit 2 are in line with the description.

By taking a photo and sending it to the caller's friend to confirm, the other party quickly gave a positive reply: this is it.

  The position was clarified, and faced with the gatekeeper of the "Iron General", everyone was in trouble again.

The property staff was busy contacting the community locksmith, and the community police called 119 firefighters to assist. After everyone's joint efforts, they finally broke into the door at 2:45 in the morning.

  Zhang Kuanxin said that as soon as he entered the door, he saw a woman in her 30s collapsed beside the coffee table.

He went forward to check and found that the woman was in a semi-conscious state, with a spontaneous pulse and breathing.

Afterwards, everyone carried the patient down to the fourth floor on a stretcher together, and the ambulance galloped all the way to take him to the Wuhan Sixth Hospital at 2:53 a.m.

  On the afternoon of the 29th, Zhang Kuanxin contacted the emergency department of Wuhan Sixth Hospital for a return visit and confirmed that the caller quickly regained consciousness after inhaling oxygen and was discharged home at noon that day.

"Based on the patient's symptoms, hysteria is more likely." Zhang Kuanxin said that every call for help is related to a living life. It is better to be a false alarm than to take it lightly. Only in this way is the greatest respect for life. .