Soon, GPS-powered app for better ambulance services
HYDERABAD: On September 6, Narsimha Reddy Konda, an auto driver, passed away as the 108 emergency ambulance his family had called for help went to the wrong address. To ensure that such mishaps do not happen, the agency operating the 108 Ambulance Services is coming up with an app to reach the places from where the calls emerged at the quickest possible time.
Presently, the 108 ambulance service does not have the facility to pin point the location of the caller using GPS. Tragedies such as the death of Narsimha, could be a thing of the past with Emergency Management and Research Institute (EMRI), the agency that operates the 108 service launching its “108 android application”.
The application is expected to be launched in October and this app is said to be successful in Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan, where it was already introduced.
Users of the app can dial 108 using the app which will then share GPS location of the caller. “This will help bring down our response time. We do have the technology to pinpoint the location of the caller, but the GPS information is not always accurate which creates further problems, calling through the app will help us pinpoint caller location,” said Brahmananda Reddy, chief operating officer, EMRI
Presently, the 108 ambulance service does not have the facility to pin point the location of the caller using GPS. Tragedies such as the death of Narsimha, could be a thing of the past with Emergency Management and Research Institute (EMRI), the agency that operates the 108 service launching its “108 android application”.
The application is expected to be launched in October and this app is said to be successful in Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan, where it was already introduced.
Users of the app can dial 108 using the app which will then share GPS location of the caller. “This will help bring down our response time. We do have the technology to pinpoint the location of the caller, but the GPS information is not always accurate which creates further problems, calling through the app will help us pinpoint caller location,” said Brahmananda Reddy, chief operating officer, EMRI
Comments
Post a Comment