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© KYODOTokyo to get more ambulances to deal with heat during 2020 Olympics
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plasticmonkey
They should be doing more than making an effort. Tokyo made a bid for the Olympics. Foreigners come to the Olympics. Do the job and do it right. Otherwise don't bid. Or is this whole gig just a farce?
How much Japanese foreigners speak is simply irrelevant.
AramaTaihenNoYouDidnt
What good will it do if you end up without being treated at a hospital and likely (hopefully not...) left dry and high to the mercy of "you're on your own" dilemma.
Samit Basu
More ambulance is not the solution to heat, moving the Olympics to late September Is!
rcch
for me what,s scary is that it,s guaranteed that people gonna need ambulances.
kwatt
@Luddite
Ask patient choice of ambulance or taxi first. if patient is unconscious, call ambulance
If ambulance does not come soon and can not go soon through very congested streets/roads during Olympic games, patient might die there or in ambulance. Paramedic staffs are not medical doctor in the ambulance in Japan and but monitor and AED are installed in. Taxi doesn't have any monitor machine but can have AED (Automated External Defibrillator) and can take patient to the nearest hospital soon. Each taxi driver has list of about 5 hospitals in his area that he knows very well.
Luddite
How is that a solution? How can the driver monitor the condition of the patient? How does he know which hospital will accept the patient? A really dangerous and naive suggestion.
kwatt
The best solution seems all taxis become temporary ambulance to carry them to the nearest hospitals. Nearest taxi drivers can come quick and pick them up to hospital about 5-10 minutes, faster than regular ambulance coming and carrying them about 10-30 minutes.
papigiulio
This
Actually I figured this out this morning when an ambulance wanted to cross an intersection. NO ONE STOPS. it is absolutely incredible. Cars just zip in front of the ambulance. Hence the slow speed
Tom Young
Two weeks ago, 23,000 Japanese people were hospitalized for heatstroke and they weren't even exerting themselves. They probably weren't gathered within hordes of people either. Several died.
If the Olympics were to be held in July or August, do you think there will be enough ambulances to rush (and I use that word loosely) people to hospitals to be treated for heatstroke?
Push your government leaders to push Japan's leaders to move the Olympics to October.
seanwd20
@Disillusioned
How much Japanese can you speak? At least they're making an effort.
sf2k
Too bad Esperanto wasn't employed, only 150 hours to learn and everyone visiting could also pick up a few easy phrases. Lots of Esperanto groups in Japan. Good temporary utility language. Then when the circus is over back to regular local programming.
nigelboy
The average temperature in Tokyo between July 24 to August 9 was 32 degrees, not the hottest. People are overly concerned because this summer in a Tokyo during that exceeded 2~3degrees.
Luddite
Agreed, they are just taxis, no paramedics to initiate treatment, vital minutes can be lost on the journey to an appropriate hospital who will accept the patient. The idea they will get already over worked and tired staff to man these vehicles shows how the problem is not being taken seriously. The preparation for the Olympics is just crisis management, there is little to no planning.
nedotjp
These are just taxis. The Health Policy Bureau needs to enable 1st responders, the heat, its going to be brutal on older tourists.
Disillusioned
I'm curious about what level of English proficiency these members have. I fear it is not much passed. "I'm fine thank you. And you!" - Many of the train lines have introduced conductors and drivers who speak English, kind of. They read cards in their finest katakana English, which is close to understandable, only close. On paper Japan is making an effort to accommodate foreigners. However, just because some clown can read a card in an unintellgable katakana version of something like English does not mean they are taking it seriously.
sakurasuki
With current load, people already being refused by hospital although ambulance manage to get them on time, let's see then what will happen during olympic.
https://japantoday.com/category/national/cases-of-emergency-patient-refusal-by-hospitals-rise-to-over-16000
Yubaru
You and the rest of the country have a long way to go! Just having more ambulances is not going to do a hell of a lot when you wont be able to actually GET the the people in need fast enough, due to traffic jams that are expected, along with roads blocked off for use by the Olympics only.
Not to mention actually finding a hospital that will take the patients, particularly at night!