At SIEHS 1122, our work has never been only about moving patients from point A to point B.It is about what we protect along the way — life where possible, and dignity always.
Because for us, emergency care is not just medical. It is moral.
Every shift, our teams step into someone’s worst moment. A crash scene. A collapsed structure. A silent phone in an unconscious patient’s pocket. Cash folded inside a wallet. Documents no one wants to lose in chaos.
In Gulshan-e-Hadeed, when Ghulam Hyder was picked after a motorcycle-truck collision, he was unconscious with a head injury and no attendant at scene. Our crew shifted him safely to JPMC Karachi. Alongside clinical care, they secured his belongings — Rs. 38,000 and a smartphone — and handed them to his mother on arrival.
That is not “extra.”That is the standard we hold ourselves to.
Not every emergency ends the way we pray it will.And that is exactly when character is tested most.
In the Lyari building collapse, responder Shaikh Qadeer was working through rubble, dust, and panic when he found valuables beside a victim who had not survived: 13 cheques worth millions, Rs. 8,000 in cash, papers, and IDs belonging to Daya Lal.
In that moment, he did what defines service at SIEHS 1122: he secured every item, documented it, and returned everything safely to Daya Lal’s brother-in-law, Naraish. Quietly, without fuss, exactly as entrusted.
At SIEHS, we believe dignity is not linked to outcome.It is linked to duty.
One of our Highway Hope teams was already en route from Ubri Bypass to an active emergency when they encountered another crash at Shah Hussain Bypass — a motorcyclist unconscious, critically injured, no family present.
The team followed protocol immediately: on-site first aid, stabilisation, continuous monitoring, shift to Civil Hospital Khairpur. Later, he was identified as Ali Akber.
At the scene, responders also secured his personal items, including his mobile phone, and Rs. 4,61,600 in cash. Everything was documented and returned to his family exactly as received. His father later thanked the team, not only for urgent care, but for integrity.
And that is the point.
People remember response time.But families remember trust.
At SIEHS 1122, we want people to know exactly who we are when it matters most:
We are the team that shows up fast.We are the team that treats first, speaks gently, and acts cleanly.We are the team that does the right thing even when no one is watching.
Saving lives will always be our core mission.But we are equally committed to something that keeps public service alive: earning trust, every single call.
So when someone dials 1122, we want them to feel one thing clearly:You are not alone. We’ve got your back — in treatment, in transfer, and in everything entrusted to us.
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