Australian Emergency
Emergency Information
The number 000 (called 'triple
zero' or 'triple oh') can be dialed from
any telephone in Australia, home or
payphone, free of charge. This number will
connect you with emergency operators for
the police, fire brigade, and ambulance
service. The first question that the
operator will ask is which service you
need.
If you want to contact
these services but the situation is
not an emergency, don't call 000 --
call your local police, fire brigade,
or ambulance station.
While you can dial 000 from an
increasing number of mobile phones sold in
Australia, the universal emergency number
on these is actually 112. All
carriers provide a 112 service to all
phones within their coverage area, so you
may be able to call 112 from your phone
even if you do not have normal phone
coverage from your own provider. You can
also call it from phones whose SIM cards
have been removed.
The teletext (TTY) emergency service
number for hearing or speech impaired
people with appropriate equipment is
106.
Calls from fixed line/landline phones
may be traced in order to assist the
emergency services to reach you. The
Australian emergency services cannot trace
the origin of emergency calls from mobile
phones, so be sure to calmly and clearly
provide details of your location. Because
of an increasing number of calls made
accidentally from cellular phones left in
bags or pockets, the emergency operators
will disconnect your call after 30 seconds
if they do not think there is anyone at the
other end of the line.
Emergency numbers from other countries
(for example, '911' in the USA) do not
work in Australia.
Medical
care
Australia has first world medical
standards, and you can expect to receive
treatment that is the equal of care in
other industrialised countries. In
particular, it is safe to receive blood
transfusions in Australia, as donors are
screened for HIV, hepatitis and many other
blood borne illnesses.
However, since Australia's population
density is low, parts of Australia are a
long way from medical facilities of any
kind. Towns with population 5000 or more
will have a small hospital capable of
giving emergency treatment in serious
emergencies, and larger towns will have a
base hospital capable of routine and some
kinds of emergency surgery. In severe
cases, particularly any kind of injury
requiring microsurgery, you will need to be
evacuated to one of the capital cities for
treatment. Evacuation procedures are well
established and normally involve being
evacuated by plane or helicopter.
Australian citizens and permanent
residents who live in the country can
receive healthcare through the taxpayer
funded Medicare system (although in most
states ambulance costs are entirely the
user's responsibility). Other travellers
should hold appropriate insurance covering
medical expenses, as they will be required
to pay the full cost of care. Visitors from
New Zealand, United Kingdom, Ireland,
Sweden, the Netherlands, Finland, Italy,
Malta and Norway are entitled to free
reciprocal Medicare treatment for medical
problems that occur during their visit.
Specific Australian Dangers to Watch
Out For
|