THIS CARD COULD
SAVE YOUR LIFE!

Zoomer Media joins Kela Medical
in Introducing the
Emergency Protection Card
- Displays your most recent electrocardiogram
- Fits in your wallet
Those first few minutes are vital
The electrocardiogram (ECG) on the Emergency Protection Card allows an emergency physician to initiate the treatment of patients with chest pain immediately instead of waiting for hours for an ECG baseline to be completed and then compared to a re-test. This kind of protection is only available from the Emergency Protection Card. It is time for you to gain those critical hours in immediate treatment with the Emergency Protection Card!
Get the right treatment... faster
If you ever need to go to the hospital, the electrocardiogram (ECG) and other medical information on the Emergency Protection Card reduces the time for the treating physician to correctly apply management as well as avoid unnecessary testing. This is especially critical when you are out of the country. Emergency Protection Card not only protects you in an emergency, it provides vital information to the treating physician anywhere in the world. An overnight stay at a hospital outside of Canada, which is almost guaranteed when you show up with chest pain, can cost over $10,000!
90% of patients are unprepared!
Most of the patients do not have an electrocardiogram (ECG) with them when they are being sent to the hospital. You don’t want to be caught when you are unprepared. Make sure you get the Emergency Protection Card before you travel. The Emergency Protection Card can save a life during an Emergency. An ECG is the one thing that can have a huge impact on your management during an emergency.
More reasons to have the Emergency Protection Card:
79% of physicians feel that a comprehensive patient profile reassures them about the appropriateness of their patient management and treatment decisions.
96% of them either do not know the names of their drugs, or incorrectly provide the names to healthcare providers.
There is a 54% reduction in unnecessary hospital admissions when physicians have access to an electrocardiogram.
When you fail to prepare, you prepare to fail. 

Want to find out how prepared you are for a medical Emergency?



