The Fire Services Bureau (CB) announced yesterday that Macau recorded 48,781 ambulance attendances last year, an increase of 9,668 cases, or 24.72 percent, year on year, the rise of which was mainly due to the COVID-19 outbreak in June last year and Macau’s COVID-19 transition period.
Fire Services Bureau Commissioner Leong Iok Sam announced last year’s ambulance statistics during a press conference at the CB headquarters in Nam Van.
During the transition period, which began on December 8 and ended on January 8, a large number of residents were infected with COVID-19, resulting in a steep increase in the number of ambulance calls, with an average of 400 ambulances being sent out a day, posing a serious challenge to emergency rescues, according to Leong.
However, during the transition period over half of the calls were found to be an abuse of the free-of-charge ambulance service, Leong pointed out.
In response to the abuse, Leong said, the bureau immediately made a public appeal and adjusted the rules for its control centre on which calls should be classified as real emergencies. Since the adjustment, Leong pointed out, the abuse of the ambulance service has improved “significantly”.
Leong also said that from January 1, 2020, to December 31 last year, the bureau handled a total of 18,916 suspected or confirmed COVID-19 cases, involving a total of 30,528 people, with 13,820 suspected cases involving 23,912 people who were transported to a location designated by the Health Bureau (SSM).
Fire cases drop
Macau recorded 816 fires last year, down by 4.23 percent, or 36 cases, year on year, among which 522 fires were mainly due to unattended stoves, short circuits of electric appliances, machine malfunctions and embers from burning joss sticks and incense papers, accounting for 63.97 percent of the total fires, according to Leong.
Statistics show that the bureau’s firefighting, rescue, emergency and ambulance services plus other special operations totalled 57,424 last year, an increase of 11,694, or 25.57 percent, compared with 45,130 in 2021, Leong said.
According to Leong, a total of 1,936 rescues were carried out by the bureau last year, an increase of 200 cases, or 11.52 percent, compared with the 1,736 cases in 2021. Most of the rescue work involved helping to open locked doors, accounting for 402 cases, and assisting the injured, accounting for 358 cases. In addition, the total number of special service visits last year reached 5,891, which was also higher than the same period in the previous year, mainly due to the deployment of additional personnel and fire vehicles to patrol Macau.
3 households fined for breaching fire safety law
Leong noted that the legislation on fire safety in buildings and certain outdoor venues came into effect on August 17 last year, after which the bureau carried out a number of initiatives to raise public awareness of the new law, adding that since August 13 last year, it has been sending firefighters to carry out fire safety inspections of residential buildings. By December 2022, it had inspected nearly 10,000 flats, he said.
Leong added that since October 17, the bureau has officially launched a system of fines for illegal acts. So far, fines have been levied on households that have repeatedly blocked emergency exits, involving the placing of trolleys, chairs, shoe racks and other sundry items, which are serious unlawful acts under the new law. Two of the households have voluntarily paid their fines.
Commenting on the recent number of electrical fires, Leong said that in the case of the market stall fire in Avenida do General Castelo Branco, the bureau had explained the importance of fire safety to all the vendors involved.
Regarding e-vehicle fires, Leong said that the bureau was working on an e-vehicle rescue plan so that firefighters could understand the structure of e-vehicles and the required rescue methods.
Fire Services Bureau (CB) Commissioner Leong Iok Sam addresses yesterday’s press conference at the CB headquarters in Nam Van. – Photo courtesy of TDM