New York Post

False alarms & teeth

- Patrick Reilly

“Hello, 911?” The Welsh Ambulance Service revealed some of the most ridiculous calls it received this year — including from a woman who lost her voice, a person who had eaten too much kebab and another person who’d gotten their hand stuck in a mailbox.

The service said it fielded a whopping 414,149 calls to 999, its equivalent to 911 in the US, but 68,416 turned out to be not emergencie­s at all — an average of 188 bogus calls per day.

The agency published transcript­s of some of the more absurd calls it received that certainly did not warrant an emergency response.

“Yesterday evening, we had some kebab, and I might have had a little bit more than I’m used to, then this morning, I’ve had a very painful stomach,” one caller said.

Another person called to request help because he’d gotten his ring stuck on his finger. “Can you just come and see me please?” they asked after they were told an ambulance would not be coming.

A woman who lost her voice also thought to call 999: “What it is with her, her voice has given on her. We don’t know what to do. We’ve tried lemon and whatever, but it’s not doing any good.”

The bizarre calls even included a person who’d misplaced their dentures.

“I have a bottom part denture, and I went to clean my teeth and I said, ‘Where’s my false teeth?’” the caller ruminated to a dispatcher. “This sounds crazy . . . but I don’t know what else to do. Could I have swallowed my false teeth?”

The service urged residents to only call 999 if a person is “in imminent danger.”

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