Travel Health Guide · Emergency Series
What to Do in a Medical Emergency in Cabo — A Calm Guide for Tourists
A medical emergency abroad is overwhelming. The good news: Cabo has good emergency medical resources and a structured response process. Here’s the calm, practical guide for what to do — in the right order — when something serious happens to you or a travel companion.
Step 1: Stay with the patient and assess danger
Is the patient breathing? Conscious? Bleeding? Is the location safe? Move only if necessary. Then call.
Step 2: Make two parallel calls
For a clear life-threatening emergency, dial 911 (Mexico’s emergency number — same as USA/Canada). In parallel, call our 24/7 line so we coordinate English-speaking medical response and meet you at the ER. For non-life-threatening but serious situations, calling us first is usually faster.
Step 3: Communicate the basics to dispatch
Exact location (hotel + room or villa + cross street). One-sentence summary of what happened. Patient’s age and known conditions. A callback number.
Step 4: Stay on the line and prep
Unlock door. Clear furniture. Find ID, insurance card, medications. Prep the patient — recovery position if unconscious but breathing, pressure on bleeding, etc.
Step 5: At the hospital
Our bilingual representative meets you at the ER. We advocate, translate medical conversations, handle admission paperwork in English, and stay with the family through the first critical hours.
Real medical emergency in Cabo?
Our 24/7 bilingual team triages, treats, escalates and advocates. One call covers everything.
FAQ
Do dispatchers in Mexico speak English?
Most 911 dispatchers in tourist areas like Cabo do. Our line is always English-first.
What if I don’t have a Mexican SIM card?
911 works on any phone, any carrier — including international roaming. So does WhatsApp on hotel WiFi.
Should I drive the patient myself?
Almost never. Ambulance with monitors and medications en route is safer.
Will my hotel help?
Hotels typically call their preferred provider. Calling us directly is usually faster and you stay in control of hospital choice.
What if I’m alone with the patient?
Stay on the phone with dispatch — they guide you while help arrives.
Important medical note: This article is general information for travelers and is not medical advice. For an immediate life-threatening emergency in Mexico, call 911 first. For coordination of urgent care, hospital escalation, ground or air ambulance, or medical repatriation home to the USA or Canada, call our 24/7 bilingual line. Cabo Walk-In Clinic is COFEPRIS-licensed in Mexico; hospital and specialist care is delivered by an independent licensed hospital and its physicians. Travel-insurance reimbursement depends on your policy and your insurer’s review.