Video calling to emergency service dispatchers is not yet possible anywhere in the world, but Finland is aiming to find out if it could be done.

Prime Minister Petteri Orpo’s (NCP) government programme, calls for looking into the possibility of using video calls to reach emergency services.

The use of video could give emergency service experts a better idea of the situation at hand, but there would be a few hurdles to cross before such a system could be implemented.

What kind of platform that could be used is still an open question, as commercial video conferencing apps like FaceTime and WhatsApp would most likely be off the table, due to concerns including data security.

According to EU rules, eventual video calls to emergency services would be obligated to have the video feature on both ends — the caller and the dispatcher. But due to security issues, emergency services centres have not been equipped with video conferencing tech.

According to Arttu Perttula, director of the Emergency Response Centre Agency’s development department, there are other possible impacts that video calls could have on emergency services staff.

“For us, staff job satisfaction is very important. The use of video and images [in 112 calls] could possible pose new challenges in that the images could be even more burdensome and traumatising than traditional phone calls,” Perttula explained.

Using video chats would also raise questions about data security, as the privacy of callers needs to be insured, he noted.

“From a technical point of view, we have to record all calls. If we start using video, the recordings would take up quite a bit of [computer] storage space,” Perttula pointed out.

According to an EU directive on the matter, an emergency video call system would also need to have the option of text input in real time, a feature which is expected to be put in use alongside the current voice-based telephone arrangement.

Finland is already piloting an emergency services video calling system as an accessibility feature for people who use sign language and their interpreters.

  • teft@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    If the old system works why change it? Video doesn’t add anything that you can’t describe by voice. Plus with the addition of video now you get to treat dispatchers with PTSD since they now get to see all the trauma as well as hear it.

    • wmassingham@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Video doesn’t add anything that you can’t describe by voice.

      Have you never tried to talk someone through doing something over the phone? It’s incredibly slow if you can’t see what they’re doing, and you can’t see if they’re doing it right or not.

      • teft@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I work as a systems administrator. My job is to explain things over the phone while I can’t see them. It’s not slow at all. And how would that help the dispatcher? He’s gonna mime some shit to someone to do? He’s going to make shadow puppets? I cannot imagine any use case where video would help emergency dispatchers. Please enlighten me.

        • wmassingham@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          So do I. You’re telling me you’ve never had someone try to describe a cable or read an error code over the phone and completely mangle it?

          A video would let them say “yeah, that looks like a stroke” or heart attack or whatever. Or notice things the caller didn’t describe, like they’re calling for someone they found unconscious, but they didn’t notice the live power line right next to them.

    • Sixner@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Some people lack comprehensive explanations, especially when stressed. Video calls can help get a view of what is going on without guessing what the caller means.

      People can still call, video is not mandatory. It’s an extra means of assistance.