Medical Emergency Contacts
This mobile-first page keeps the highest-priority emergency contacts closest to the pilgrim, with fewer blocks on screen and steadier rendering during language swaps.
This mobile-first page keeps the highest-priority emergency contacts closest to the pilgrim, with fewer blocks on screen and steadier rendering during language swaps.
These four numbers are kept in a compact grid so urgent help stays one tap away on smaller screens.
Use for life-threatening emergencies, crowd distress, or missing-person escalation.
Use for collapse, chest pain, severe fatigue, injury, or urgent transport to hospital care.
Use for crowd trouble, family separation, security concerns, or urgent route coordination.
Use for smoke, fire, electrical accidents, or vehicle fire risk near the pilgrimage route.
The EMC chain is broken out into a dedicated page so the core route medical support loads faster and stays easier to scan on mobile.
The base-camp medical anchor for cardiac distress, fainting, or serious fatigue before the climb begins.
A cardiac support checkpoint where breathlessness and early climb strain are usually detected first.
The steepest section of the climb, with oxygen support and immediate medical attention for exhaustion.
A useful observation point for trekkers who need rest, monitoring, and guidance before moving higher.
The hilltop hospital-level response point for treatment near the shrine area after the climb is complete.
The card heights stay reserved while the page settles so translated text does not make this section jump.
Immediate support near the river base and the trekking start point.
Ambulance support close to the largest parking and staging zone.
Upper-hill emergency transport close to darshan movement.
Quick-response support along the Swami Ayyappan Road stretch.
Roadside medical help before forest-route or Nilakkal movement.
This FAQ uses deferred rendering so multilingual text swaps do not force the browser to paint everything at once.
Pamba Government Hospital can be reached directly for ambulance and emergency support.
Call 112 first for universal emergency response, especially for collapse, crowd distress, or missing-person escalation.
The five critical EMCs are Pamba, Neelimala Bottom, Appachimedu, Sabaripeedom, and Sannidhanam.
Pamba, Nilakkal, and Sannidhanam remain the fastest hospital-linked escalation points for the main pilgrimage flow.