
114 emergency number helps if you cannot communicate easily in france
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THE SERVICE IS AVAILABLE VIA APP, TEXT, AND ONLINE - BUT FEW PEOPLE KNOW ABOUT IT Did you know that France has a separate emergency phone number for people who cannot hear, have hearing
difficulties, or other communication struggles? The number 114 is available via text and app, and is also online at INFO.URGENCE114.FR. Users can ask health questions or request the
emergency services in the same way as hearing people would when using speaking emergency numbers, such as 15, 17, 18, or the European-wide phone number 112. READ MORE: WHAT NUMBERS SHOULD I
DIAL IN AN EMERGENCY IN FRANCE? It is free to use and available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. It can be used to contact the SAMU, pompiers (fire and rescue service), police, and
gendarmerie. Currently, it is used on average 80 times a day. However, A NEW POLL* has found that just 20% of people in France know of the 114 service, despite it having been launched 12
years ago by the Ministries of Health and the Interior, and piloted by the CHU Alpes-Grenoble. As a result, the Centre national relais (CNR) 114, has now launched a new campaign to raise
awareness of the number, especially among populations that may find it useful. _IMAGE: URGENCE 114_ SERVICE EFFECTIVE Up to seven million people in France are affected by a condition that
may mean using 114 would be easier for them than calling a typical emergency number. This includes people who are hard of hearing, deaf, deafblind, or who have aphasia (a language disorder
that causes difficulty with communication or understanding language, sometimes experienced by people after a stroke). And the service appears to be effective; the same poll* found that of
the 6% of French people who said they had used 114, 77% were satisfied, 74% said they had confidence in the people they spoke to, and 70% found it easy to make themselves understood. “114 is
the emergency number for anyone who has difficulty hearing or speaking, even temporarily,” said Camille Page, the deputy director of centres at the CHU Alpes-Grenoble. “This means that
everyone can access emergency services. But 114 also concerns the people around them: carers, family and friends, doctors, pharmacists, paramedical practitioners, adapted schools and
associations, sign language interpreters, as well as local public services.” HOW TO ACCESS 114 The 114 service can be accessed via: * SMS (text) The head of the CNR 114 service, Dr Véronique
Équy, has recommended that people download it onto their mobile, even if they do not plan to use it, or think they are unlikely to do so. “We recommend that users of 114 download the
application onto their mobile and complete their profile on the application. This will save them precious time in the event of an emergency,” she said. The app can also be used by speaking
or hearing people who are unable to hear or speak temporarily, for whatever reason - whether due to a health condition, or safety concerns. _*Poll by Viavoice, representative of the French
population aged 18 or over, done between December 4-8 2023._ RELATED ARTICLES WHAT NUMBERS SHOULD I DIAL IN AN EMERGENCY IN FRANCE? CAN I CALL THE EMERGENCY SERVICES IN FRANCE WITH A UK
MOBILE PHONE? DO YOU KNOW WHICH EMERGENCY NUMBER TO DIAL?