Travel Health Guide · Emergency Playbook
What Happens After You Call for an Ambulance in Cabo: The First 60 Minutes
You’ve made the call. Help is coming. The next 60 minutes feel chaotic if you don’t know what’s happening. Here is exactly the sequence — what we do on our side, what happens at the patient’s location, and what to expect at the hospital.
Minutes 0–5: Dispatch
Our 24/7 line answers in English. Two parallel decisions happen at once: (1) the nearest available ambulance is dispatched to your address, (2) the on-call physician receives the case and starts thinking about treatment. If the situation needs 911, we coordinate that too.
Minutes 5–20: En route
The dispatcher stays on the line with you. They confirm the patient’s status (breathing, conscious, bleeding), give first-aid guidance if needed, and request prep tasks at your end — unlock the door, clear furniture, find ID and medications, place the patient in a safe position.
Minutes 15–30: Arrival on scene
The ground ambulance arrives. Paramedic team enters, assesses vitals, places monitors and IV if indicated, gives initial treatment (oxygen, IV fluids, pain management, cardiac drugs as needed). The team radios the receiving hospital with patient status so the ER is ready.
Minutes 30–45: Transport
Patient is moved to the ambulance. One family member typically rides along (front seat or back depending on case). The ambulance heads to the appropriate hospital — clinical decision, not arbitrary. Our team is in contact with the ER through the trip.
Minutes 45–60: Hospital arrival
ER staff meets the ambulance at the bay. Paramedic gives a 30-second handoff. Patient is moved into triage immediately. Our bilingual representative arrives at the ER to advocate for the patient, translate medical conversations, and handle admission paperwork in English.
What happens next (hours 1–24)
If the patient needs admission, we coordinate the ICU/surgery/specialty room. We notify family and your travel insurer. We collect imaging studies, lab results and discharge plan in English. If transport home becomes the next step, we begin coordinating that with your insurer’s assistance line.
One call covers everything in Cabo.
Our 24/7 bilingual team answers, triages, and dispatches — ground ambulance, hospital escalation, or air ambulance home.
FAQ
Can someone meet us at the hospital who speaks English?
Yes — our bilingual representative arrives at the ER to advocate for you.
How much does the ambulance ride cost?
Quoted in USD upfront. We provide an itemized invoice in English for your travel insurer.
What if I can’t ride in the ambulance?
Family can follow in a car or taxi. We send the hospital address and directions to whoever is driving.
What if it’s after midnight?
Same response 24/7. Our line is staffed every night.
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.