#Bike Ambulance
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
telugutimesusa · 2 years ago
Text
Another milestone in medical history
The late Chief Minister YS Rajasekhar Reddy, who made 108 and 104 services available even to the remote villages, was the life-giver of the poor. YS got the credit of making ambulances come and wait wherever an accident happened, whenever someone got sick.As his son, Chief Minister YS Jaganmohan Reddy intensified the services of 108 and 104. Bike ambulances are being made available to go to the remote hilly areas where even 108 ambulances and feeder ambulances cannot go...
Tumblr media
0 notes
majormisunderstanding · 5 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
A 1939 Ford V8 as part of the Civil Ambulance, staffed by the South Australia Police.
South Australia Police Historical Society.
27 notes · View notes
sixeye-sketch · 27 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
11 notes · View notes
olberic · 6 months ago
Text
on my walk around the block today i saw a guy unconscious on the ground (picked up from context clues that he was biking and hit a garbage can and hit the ground with no helmet) and there were two other guys there already calling an ambulance but when i tell you the sheer dread i felt when i thought it was straight up a dead body. like when i looked i could see he was breathing but so fucking scary. one of the other guys went to go move him and i had to be like man he’s unconscious on the ground due to a collision you should not move him in case he has a head or spine injury. how was that not common sense. anyways the guy woke up and i saw the ambulance come for him but still. so scary
7 notes · View notes
callmeanxietygirl · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
2 notes · View notes
avayarising · 3 months ago
Text
Bruce must genuinely be more concussed than he thinks though if he thinks Jason is a hallucination but still can’t stop himself from interacting with him and sobbing over him. (Emotional lability is a common symptom of concussions.)
He’s genuinely, seriously vulnerable and it’s freaking Jason out. He’s rambling and crying and Jason has already had to redirect him twice to stop the identities falling out in front of the paramedics. Bad enough that Jason (broken ankle, dammit, this wasn’t supposed to happen) tried to stand up out of the paramedic’s grasp when he realised just who it was they were pulling out of the back of the car and onto a stretcher, face pale and lax and bloody. Bad enough that he forgot himself enough to say “Dad?” – quietly, but loud enough for the paramedic to hear. Bad enough that when the paramedic asked “That your dad, son?” he was still too much in shock to do anything other than nod. (Bruce wasn’t supposed to be hurt. Bruce didn’t get injured, not like this. He was all-powerful, larger than life, a superhero. He couldn’t be taken out by some stupid car crash. When Jason didn’t even know he was there.)
Bruce was blinking and hazy-eyed when they brought Jason, splinted ankle and all, in to the ambulance and settled him next to the stretcher. Just play the part, Jason told himself. He probably won’t recognise you anyway.
“Jason…”
So much for that idea.
–––––––––––
Bruce has a brief memory of a truck coming out fast from a side road and a motorcycle swerving to avoid it, directly towards them. He remembers thinking I can’t do anything about this. Then a memory of a skid, the world outside the window blurring, and then the sky, framed with an edge moving past him with people jabbering at each other around him. He thinks for a moment and parses that one as him being pulled out of the side of the car by… some people.
Now he’s… in a vehicle. An ambulance.
He should get up, get back to work. The Mission… no, he’s Bruce Wayne right now, isn’t he?
Someone is being wheeled in and strapped next to him. It’s his dead son.
He knows it isn’t, really. But he can’t help himself. He smiles, tears in his eyes. Jason. His son. As he could have been. If he’d grown up. If Bruce had been able to save him. Bruce hadn’t saved him. If he’d only been quicker, had stopped the shipment sooner. His Robin –
“Hey, hey, stop. Bruce.”
Bruce, yes, he’s Bruce Wayne, he’s not –
“Hey! It’s OK, I’m here, you’re – you’re going to be OK.”
And Bruce knows it’s a hallucination, but it’s his son, and he can’t help but smile through his tears.
Prompt:
Brucie Wayne gets into a mild accident in public (read-got hit by a car). And Batman would just walk it off (“it’s barely a bruise”), but Brucie obviously… can’t.
So he has to suffer the ordeal of having civilians call paramedics, getting fussed over, and having-
Having his dead son get into the back of the ambulance with him.
Oh- oh no. He must have hit his head worse than he thought. He thought he was past this…
#batfam#jason and bruce get into a car crash#I was trying to imagine how this could happen given both Bruce’s and Jason’s driving skills and general reflexes#I think the crucial thing is that Bruce *wasn’t driving*#nor a pedestrian#he was in a car *someone else* was driving#he was on an official Wayne Enterprises trip to visit some subsidiary office or other#and he was in a Wayne Enterprises car (i.e. not one souped up with battech) with a Wayne Enterprises driver from the driver pool#the WE driver is OK by the way#rather bruised and very *very* shaken#(oh my god I nearly killed the boss)#but not badly injured#Jason was going to do a cool move where he flung the motorbike out from under him and rolled over the bonnet of the oncoming car#and back onto the bike again#he’s trained that move#but he’s trained that with skilled drivers who knew the plan#and honed it in chases and fights with desperate drivers with nothing to lose#WE driver is just an ordinary driver with ordinary levels of skill#WE driver panics and slams on the brakes when they see a motorbike bearing down on them#car skids and jackknifes and the back of it slams into a lamp-post or that truck or something#Bruce doesn’t know he’s babbling#Jason trying his best to keep a lid on the identities#means he has to keep reminding Bruce he’s Bruce without giving the game away#which means he has to be Jason#which means there’s no chance of backing out of this#the paparazzi are at the hospital when the ambulance arrives#hospital security chases them away but someone gets a good shot of bruce and jason leaving the ambulance together#there’s at least one medical professional who thinks it’s highly suspicious#that Bruce Wayne’s dead son *just happens* to get in a car crash with him and they both end up in the same ambulance#while Bruce Wayne is concussed and vulnerable
4K notes · View notes
marciliedonato · 3 months ago
Text
Someone needs to do an Akira style poster for the demo lovers like hear me out.
0 notes
motorcycletowingselangor · 4 months ago
Text
Yamaha Bikers Malaysia
Motorbike Rescue during emergencies within Klang Valley , Selangor and Johor Bahru , Call, 014-2458878 / 017-4387101 @motoaidmalaysia
No matter what you ride, we will come rescue you.
Tumblr media
0 notes
dys-lexical-linguist · 19 days ago
Text
this is 100% not true in Canada I will say But you can avoid calling 911 all together by carrying narcan and knowing cpr
How widespread is the knowledge that you should never say the words “overdose” or “drugs” or literally anything about suspected use in a call to 911? My fellow Americans, don’t say you’re seeing an overdose or suspect an overdose if you’re calling 911.
4K notes · View notes
townpostin · 6 months ago
Text
Ambulance and Bike Collision Near Chakradharpur Petrol Pump, 1 Dead
Collision results in fatal injuries; NH 75 blocked by locals. Biker succumbs to injuries after collision with ambulance. CHAKRADHARPUR – A severe collision between an ambulance and a bike occurred on Tuesday morning near the Chakradharpur Potka petrol pump. The biker was critically injured in the accident. The front part of the ambulance was also damaged in the incident. Labor leader Sikandar…
0 notes
ihopethisendswell · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
THESE KIDS I SWEAR-
1 note · View note
theirloveisgross · 8 months ago
Text
.
1 note · View note
Text
i feel like we could reduce traffic if we built a lot of walkalators along the big distances or leading up to and from train stations, and had accessible scooters for the rest of the way for shorter distances. but obviously we should invest in more comfortable trains.
0 notes
sonicenvy · 1 year ago
Text
big FML my primary computer that i use for work stuff decided to just stop working correctly tonight. literally losing my fucking mind. ahhhhhhhhhh whyyyyyy
my macbook pro turns on, plays the boot chime and just stays with a white screen, but, I plugged it into a TV and discovered that it did in fact boot to the system, but the computer is failing to display anything on the display. the system does recognize the display, but I can't run the system hardware diagnostics as they only work in the built in display, which only shows the mac white screen of death. i reset the pVRAM and the SMC chip, and I jostled the display cable and unplugged it and replugged it in.
anyways, in the infinite wisdom of 1:30 am i just bought another copy of the computer for 160 dollars on ebay that has an inferior hard drive and ram, which I am planning on just migrating my hard drive and ram to and just keeping the ones from inside that computer for something else. not a fan of how this turned out
1 note · View note
thehmn · 7 months ago
Text
A lot of Danes I’ve talked to express guilt at “taking advantage” of our universal healthcare and I sometimes wonder if it’s based on the knowledge that it’s not a universal right everywhere? Because these people are never “taking advantage” of it. They feel sick so they go see a doctor who then tell them there’s nothing wrong and they can relax. Stress less.
I have to see the doctor every month due to other illness which I don’t feel the least bit bad about but I fell victim to this feeling too once. At one point I started feeling pain in my chest, arm and neck and got really worried I was experiencing a hart attack or blood clot. At the same time I worried I was overreacting but my housemate convinced me to call Lægevagten, which isn’t the alarm center but more like a group of on-call doctors you can call if you have questions or worries. I told her about my symptoms and suddenly she said “Are you calling from this address?” having clearly looked it up on some sort of location gps system from my phone. I confirmed and she just said “Okay, I’m sending an ambulance” and within minutes two paramedics were at my door. They decided to take me to the nearest hospital where I spent the night going through all sorts of tests, from blood work, having radiation pumped into my lungs for a CT scan and several other X-ray images.
Nothing. They found nothing.
I felt so SO bad but before I even said anything they assured me “This is good. We’d rather people come here and nothing is wrong than people not come here when something is wrong and they end up dying. Now you don’t have to stress about this”
A few days later I realized the pain came from a sliiightly dislocated rib that randomly popped back into place while I was riding my bike.
I felt so silly but my friends reminded me that I didn’t make a huge fuss about it at the time. I just told the doctor my symptoms and she set the whole thing in motion. Like the doctors said, this is what universal healthcare is for. People need to feel like they can call for help even at the slightest sign of illness so it can be caught early. This is how you keep a population healthy.
But yeah, it’s such a silly feeling. We pay taxes to have universal healthcare so there’s no reason to feel guilty about using it. We just can’t help ourselves I suppose. (Let’s not even get into the fact my doctor diagnosed me with early diabetes “just to be on the safe side” that seemed to vanish almost immediately but it still means I get free yearly vaccinations and I have very mixed feelings about it)
1K notes · View notes
vivwritescrappythings · 4 months ago
Text
roadburn
simon “ghost” riley x gn!reader
@cielosafeplace wrote an idea on here about what Simon would do if you crashed on his motorcycle and that was enough to get me out of my writing slump. Truly doing the lord’s work.
cw: motorcycle accident, blood, mild gore, protective Simon, POV switch, gn! reader, no use of y/n, not very good.
word count: 1.8k
masterlist
Everything was ringing.
You didn’t really understand what was going on—one moment you were riding behind Simon on his motorcycle, and now you were sitting up on the traffic median. It was blurry around you, movement and cars and people looking like blocks of color in an abstract painting.
The breeze tousled your hair, crisp and clean in your nose. Your hair? You didn’t remember taking off your helmet. Shaking fingers made their way up to your head, passing through where the helmet would be to simply comb through hair. You pulled your fingers away, the swimming image of your hand in front of you showing the tips of your gloved fingers shining crimson. You didn’t quite notice that your gloves were shredded to bits, part of your palms visible and raw beneath.
It was enough to send a shock through you, your breath coming out so harshly that you actually let out a sound. It was swallowed by the rest of the noise going on around you, shouting and honking and cars driving by. The commotion surrounding you was far too loud, the quality of it like you were swimming underwater.
You stood on shaky legs, grabbing onto a street sign to pull yourself to standing as you fought vertigo. Everything was moving so slowly. You felt like you had to get to your feet, get off the traffic median.
Your vision was clearing. You could see a few people running around and chattering, their frantic gestures seeming all too slow to make sense. Your helmet was in the road, the buckle flapping open from where you must have ripped it off, there was a flat spot from where your head dragged across the rough pavement.
Simon’s motorcycle was on the curb, on its side and banged up in a few areas—he’d be cross to have to fix it.
Simon.
Where was he?
It wasn’t like Simon to not be glued to your side. Sometimes you joked that he was more guard dog than boyfriend, snarling and snapping his jaws at anyone that got too close for comfort. The fact that he wasn’t next to you right now made your blood run cold.
You rubbed your eyes on the back of your hand, blinking.
You heard him before you saw him. You’d never heard Simon scream like that, your name—your real name, not calling you “pet” like he normally did—ringing through the air like a thunderclap.
He couldn’t believe it. That fucking sod ran a red light, completely blew through it, and hit the bike hard enough to make him lose control.
He heard you scream, the sound of it muffled by the helmet covering your head. Simon’s heart was in his throat, hardly recognizing the pain as the bike dragged him across the road, his thigh trapped beneath the vehicle as his pants got shredded down to the skin. His jacket was destroyed, the leather hot where it scraped across the asphalt.
The driver was getting out of his truck, shouting his useless apologies as other good samaritans stopped to see what was going on.
It didn’t matter, none of it mattered as Simon shoved his bike off his leg like it was a toy and heard it crumple as he stood. The blood soaking into his pants was nothing—child’s play compared to the torture he’d experienced at work. Getting hung on a meat hook really makes any other form of pain look like a paper cut.
It was like he had tunnel vision, the panic of not being able to immediately spot you making him think the worst. You were a little thing compared to him, far too fragile for his comfort.
The people who had gotten out of their cars surrounded him in a swarm of too-loud voices and concerned gazes, trying to get him to sit down and wait for the ambulance. The driver got in his face, apologizing and claiming he didn’t see the two of you on the motorcycle. If Simon wasn’t busy worrying about you, he probably would’ve battered the idiot on the spot.
He simply brushed him aside, shouting your name in a bid of desperation. Despite all the near-death situations he’d lived through, the terror he felt at the pit of his stomach was more intense than anything he had ever experienced before.
The image of your mangled body on the asphalt filled his mind, imagination running wild. What if you’d been run over? Broke your damn neck?
His world was already falling apart as he took a few staggering steps.
Then he spotted you, all the way on the median and clutching a sign as you leaned against the metal pole. Your helmet was sitting on the ground nearby, cracked and part of the shell entirely scraped off. You must have taken it off in your shock.
Blood was running down your face, matting in your hair and following the contours of your features. Simon was running before he could think, mowing down any person that stupidly stood between the two of you. There was a sting of pain shooting up his leg with each step, but he hardly noticed.
You looked so dazed, your normally sharp gaze floating as you heard him shout your name. Fear and relief surged through Simon at once—you were bleeding, but you were standing and around and undeniably alive.
He wasn’t thinking enough to remember to be careful about crossing the last open lane of traffic, almost getting plowed through by a truck. A shout was barked at the driver as a big hand smacked the hood, Simon continuing his beeline to you. It was instinct at this point, like blinders had been fitted over his eyes to only see you.
His helmet skittered across the road where he threw it off, needing to see your face without the tint of the visor. Everything got exponentially louder without his helmet.
The tension was clear in your stance, shock making your spine ramrod straight and your hands clench at your sides. He approached carefully, tilting his head a little so he was closer to your height and his gloved hands outstretched. The spark of recognition in your gaze comforted him further, starting to placate the gnawing anxiety in his stomach.
Neither of you said anything as Simon gathered you up in his arms and held you close to his chest, a big hand cupping the back of your head. Your hands twisted in his shirt beneath the jacket, pulling him toward you as a shudder ran through you. He pressed his nose to the crown of your head and inhaled deeply.
He could care less about the chaos going on behind him, the sirens of an ambulance in the distance as insignificant to him as chirping birds.
Fingertips gently pressed into the side of your jaw, tilting your head up to look at him. The blood was smeared across part of your face, but it looked like the bleeding was starting to slow. Your eyes were wide and a touch vacant as you looked up at him.
“You with me, pet?” Simon asked, his head crowding in close to yours as he tried to block out the rest of the world. He held his breath while waiting for your answer.
You nodded—albeit shakily as you looked him over. “Si, your leg.” Your voice was soft and wavering as you spoke. He watched your brows furrow with concern, lips parting.
“S’okay, don’t worry about me,” he said immediately, nudging your chin to look back up at his face. He didn’t even bother to look down at his leg. It didn’t hurt, the adrenaline fueling him enough to not feel it quite yet.
His thumbs smoothed over your face, his careful gaze focusing on the cut hidden in your hair as he took every detail of you in. Your jeans were ripped along your knees and up your thigh, your shirt a bit askew, your gloves torn. You had some road burn, some scrapes, hit your head pretty damn good, but you were standing and talking to him.
He could cry. Simon choked as he pulled you back into his chest, not wanting you to see how wet his dark eyes became. Fuck. There was a moment there that he thought he’d gotten you killed. The best thing in his sorry excuse for a life, dead in the road because he couldn’t protect you.
But you were here, you were in his arms and you were breathing. The panic receded, he took deep breaths as he looked up at the gloomy sky to try and get his head back on his shoulders.
The siren of the ambulance made his splitting headache worse, police cars following and the lights flashing in his eyes. It was only when they were parked near his destroyed motorcycle that he moved, keeping you clutched in the cage of his arms as he limped back across the street toward them.
The driver that hit you had the audacity to approach again, citing apologies and claims that he didn’t even see the motorcycle. Simon shoved him away, snarling like an animal. “Get the fuck away from us,” he hissed, voice low. “Got half the mind to kill you where you stand.”
You grabbed Simon’s wrist, grip soft. “Stop, Si,” you murmured, dragging him with you to the ambulance. There were already some people talking to the police that showed up, telling them what happened.
Simon made them tend to you first, worried you were concussed or had internal injuries. He fussed over you, staying close to you as the EMT shined a flashlight in your eyes and asked you soft-spoken questions. Price was already on his way to come grab the two of you, the fossil of a flip phone in his pocket still working unlike your smashed device.
He didn’t even know that there was a part of the meat of his calf that got burned and torn up from the bike landing on top of him until one of the medics started to force him onto a stretcher. He’d need stitches, something he could do himself if the ridiculous EMTs weren’t trying to corral him like a wild horse.
He would’ve fought it if you didn’t make him lay down, only soothed by the fact that Price showed up. You weren’t injured badly, thankfully, just some roadburn and a cut on your head that bled worse than it needed to.
Simon finally relaxed onto the stretcher after you kissed his scarred cheek, promising him that you were okay and you’d see him at the hospital. The adrenaline rushed out of him as soon as he was loaded up into the back, his dark eyes fluttering shut as he let out a soft groan.
He couldn’t believe he’d have to rebuild that fucking bike now.
801 notes · View notes