Emergency line live 24/7. Average dispatch target under 30 minutes in major cities.
Clinical Guidance
How to assess symptoms and act early
For mixed medical support in Martil, request same-day review when symptoms are persistent, worsening, or unclear and do not fit one single specialty safely.
Read full symptom and waiting guide
This pathway covers multidisciplinary or uncategorized medical needs. Triage should prioritize symptom trend, functional impact, and red flags, then route quickly to the most appropriate clinician.
When to request same-day medical help
Symptoms involve multiple systems or remain unclear after basic home care.
Pain, fever, weakness, dizziness, or digestive and respiratory complaints are affecting normal daily function.
Condition is not improving within 24 to 48 hours, or keeps recurring.
Patient has high-risk context such as older age, pregnancy, chronic disease, or immune fragility.
Emergency warning signs (call now)
Severe breathing difficulty, chest pain, confusion, or sudden neurological deficit.
Persistent vomiting with dehydration, uncontrolled bleeding, or severe trauma.
Rapidly worsening allergic reaction, facial swelling, or airway compromise.
Any fast deterioration where waiting could increase clinical risk.
What to do while waiting for the doctor
Keep the patient calm, in a safe position, and reduce unnecessary movement.
Track key changes: temperature, pain intensity, breathing, hydration, and consciousness.
Prepare medications, allergies, chronic conditions, and recent reports for rapid triage.
Avoid random self-medication escalation; switch immediately to emergency call if red flags appear.
Good outcomes usually come from early escalation, clear symptom tracking, and disciplined waiting steps.
This guide is educational and does not replace medical diagnosis.