When calling from a mobile telephone
Triple Zero (000) is Australia's primary telephone number to call for assistance in life threatening or time critical emergency situations.
112 is a secondary emergency number that can be dialled from mobile phones in Australia. Special capabilities, including roaming, once only existed when dialling 112, however mobile phones manufactured since January 2002 also provide these capabilities when dialling Triple Zero (000) to access the Emergency Call Service.
There is a misconception that 112 calls will be carried by satellite if there is no mobile coverage. Satellite phones use a different technology and your mobile phone cannot access a satellite network.
Important – if there is no mobile coverage on any network, you will not be able to reach the Emergency Call Service via a mobile phone, regardless of which number you dialled.
To find out more about calling Triple Zero (000) from a mobile telephone, visit the Australian Communications and Media Authority website.
112—International standard emergency number
Triple Zero (000) is Australia's primary telephone number to call for assistance in life threatening or time critical emergency situations. Dialling 112 directs you to the same Triple Zero (000) call service and does not give your call priority over Triple Zero (000).
112 is an international standard emergency number which can only be dialled on a digital mobile phone. It is accepted as a secondary international emergency number in some parts of the world, including Australia, and can be dialled in areas of GSM network coverage with the call automatically translated to that country’s emergency number. It does not require a simcard or pin number to make the call, however phone coverage must be available (any carrier) for the call to proceed.
There is no advantage to dialling 112 over Triple Zero (000). Calls to 112 do not go to the head of the queue for emergency services, and it is not true that it is the only number that will work on a mobile phone.
Dialling 112 from a fixed line telephone in Australia (including payphones) will not connect you to the emergency call service as it is only available from digital mobile phones.
Nuts wrote:If 000 wont work 112 wont
Gadgetgeek wrote:There are places moving to an enhanced SMS capable emergency call system, but its an expensive tech to put in place. There is some concern among some that it would lead to more false calls, which I think doesn't stand up to scrutiny. As SMS as a standard fragments, its becoming less effective for this type of system anyway, its no good if it can't also deal with Imessage and other SMS-like systems. Ultimately the carriers would have to do it, and they are only now sort of kind of admitting that SMS is not as expensive as they claimed it was.
north-north-west wrote:... so why can't something similar be done nationally for emergency services?
north-north-west wrote:Further on the SMS emergency issue:
The snake bite thread got me thinking about this. Standard protocol is immobilisation, compression bandage, dial 000 . . .
House fire: standard protocol is evacuation, dial 000 . . .
Assault, serious medical issue, serious vehicle accident: dial 000 . . .
It quite genuinely is a matter of a official discrimination against a portion of the population. And with hearing problems being on the rise, it's a growing portion of the population.
Might be time for me to start getting stuck into some politicians to have something done about this.
roopass wrote:north-north-west wrote:Further on the SMS emergency issue:
The snake bite thread got me thinking about this. Standard protocol is immobilisation, compression bandage, dial 000 . . .
House fire: standard protocol is evacuation, dial 000 . . .
Assault, serious medical issue, serious vehicle accident: dial 000 . . .
It quite genuinely is a matter of a official discrimination against a portion of the population. And with hearing problems being on the rise, it's a growing portion of the population.
Might be time for me to start getting stuck into some politicians to have something done about this.
I'm glad I threw this ? out there NNW, maybe starting a petition might help?
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