Since the injuries on these people were obvious, it was not difficult for Grandma Cao to draw a preliminary conclusion. Her judgment on the two seriously injured people should be consistent with that of Student Xie.
Amputation, and I'm afraid it has to be done on the spot to save his life.
This is where little Cao Zhile’s work begins.
After being ordered by his grandmother to stay in the car, the child was quite depressed for a while. But when he received the mobile phone and task thrown by the beautiful sister, the child became energetic.
The six-year-old kid was really busy. After getting the phone, he immediately used his left little finger to carefully and accurately press the 120 button to dial the number.
Beep, beep, beep. The phone line was connected. The kid's first words were simple and direct: "Send an ambulance quickly."
The 120 operator responded quickly, recognized the child's voice and asked: "How old are you? Is there an adult with you? If so, let your parents take the call."
A child with a childish voice may not be able to speak completely. If the child misleads the on-site information, it will seriously affect the subsequent rescue work.
"Everyone around me is inside rescuing people," Cao Zhile reported. "They are rescuing people and have no time to talk on the phone, so I am here to speak for them."
...
...
The kid's little voice was serious, without any hint of joking, prank or nonsense.
120 operator: This kid seems to be able to speak well and has some logic. We can ask him again.
"Tell me what happened?"
"Many cars were buried under the ground," said Cao Zhile.
"Where did it happen?" The operator was worried when asking this important question. In many helpline calls, this is a question that even adults themselves may not be able to figure out the answer to.
Cao Zhile immediately provided the other party with two information channels: "Call the police. You can ask the police. This is Chengjiang Road."
"Do you know Chengjiang Road?"
It wasn't someone who told the kid. It was the smart kid who, when he was idle on the road, observed the roadside signs and memorized them in his little head.
The 120 operator quickly wrote down the words on a piece of paper: "OK, we will immediately send an ambulance from the nearest hospital to the scene."
Little Cao Zhile said: "We need a lot of ambulances, send as many as you can."
120 Operator: ...Got it.
"Let the ambulance take--" Little Cao Zhile continued to carry out the notification task.
"There are doctors and first aid supplies in the ambulance, don't worry." Perhaps sensing the kid's overly serious anxiety, the 120 operator unconsciously comforted him.
"Not enough." Cao Zhile rejected the other party's words.
Not enough? The 120 operator was stunned.
"It's not enough to say how beautiful she is." Cao Zhile said. There was no need for Grandma Cao to inform him later, because the beautiful sister told him early in the morning that he might need to notify 120, "There may be injured people at the scene who need amputation."
Does this kid know what amputation means? Because this kid's voice is so calm, so calm that it's extraordinary, like a little doctor. The operator thought.
As for amputation, the pretty sister didn't have time to explain it to him. But it was no problem. Cao Zhile was born in a family of doctors and knew more medical terms than ordinary children. In fact, what he was best at was not playing the piano but medicine.
"Amputations are classified into major and minor types. If you only amputate a finger, it's called a minor amputation. If you saw off a leg, it's called a major amputation. Don't you understand?"
120 operator: I really may not understand as well as you do. Where did this kid come from?
Continue read on readnovelmtl.com