Medical emergency involving possible stroke in West Point, West Point UT
Heads up: This post was detected from real-time dispatch audio. Information may be incomplete, and the situation may evolve. Always verify using official agency releases.
A medical emergency occurred near North 2000 West in West Point involving a 64-year-old female showing symptoms of a possible stroke including vision changes and neurological issues.
Audio|Heard on: Layton City Police and Fire
Listen to dispatch call
02:33
Transcript:
00:00
Ambulance 42, respond to 28-Zulu, stroke,
00:04
at near North 2000 West, in West Point.
00:08
Ambulance 42, respond to 28-Zulu, stroke, at near North 2000 West, in West Point.
00:23
Lima 84, our complaint is advising her husband's inside, that he is acting out, there is a child inside.
00:31
He is not aware.
00:32
Police have been called.
00:38
We do hate ambulance 41 and show truck 41 and wraps that call.
00:48
Ambulance 41.
00:54
Respond to 28 Zulu,
00:57
stroke. And 21, respond to 28 Zulu,
01:01
stroke. And 217, versed south-out in west, and West Point.
01:05
The ambulance 41, respond to POSO,
01:08
still,
01:10
and 21st,
01:11
Rast-South-A-West,
01:13
and Westport.
01:21
Medic 42, respond to 28 Charlie, stroke,
01:26
at near North 2000 West, in West Point.
01:30
Medic 42, respond to 28 Charlie, stroke at near North 2000 West, in West Point.
01:50
Hello.
01:53
Okay,
01:55
trying to stay,
01:57
near North 2000 West, West Point
02:01
They will be in the back of the store by the cheese.
02:05
A 64-year-old female, who is having a stroke,
02:09
bright eyes, burning and blurry,
02:12
trestles heavy, hearts, racing.
02:14
She is responding normally, breathing normally,
02:17
has some vision changes.
02:30
Thank you. Good.
Disclaimer:
This transcript was automatically generated and may contain inaccuracies. Please verify the information independently.
Location mentioned:
N 2000 W, West Point, UT 84015
This shows a Google Street View of the area near the location, which might not be the exact address.
Correct
Incorrect
Not all dispatch calls become confirmed incidents. This reflects early radio traffic only. Treat with caution.