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112 and 911 redirect to 190 on mobile phones; 188 – Hotline Help. Chile: 133: 131: 132: Useful mnemonic is ABC123: Ambulancia (Ambulance) – 131, Bomberos (Fire) – 132, Carabineros (Police) – 133. 911 and 112 redirect to 133. Colombia: 112: 125: 119: General emergency - 123; Anti-kidnapping and extortion hotline – 165. [32] Ecuador: 911
TEEN LINE is a non-profit nationwide teen help hotline based out of the Cedars Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California.Trained teen volunteers can be reached nightly by calling (800) 852-8336 from 6 pm to 10 pm PST or by texting "TEEN" to 839863 from 6 pm to 9pm PST.
The National Runaway Safeline (also known as NRS or 1-800-RUNAWAY; formerly known as the National Runaway Switchboard) is the national communications system designated by the United States federal government for runaway and homeless youth, their parents and families, teens in crisis, and others who might benefit from its services.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Educational Card from Jennifer Ann's Group featuring the National Teen Dating Abuse Helpline Loveisrespect , a 24-hour national Web-based and telephone resource, was created to help teens (ages 13–18) experiencing dating abuse, and is the only helpline in the U.S. serving all 50 states, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
A crisis hotline is a phone number people can call to get immediate emergency telephone counseling, usually by trained volunteers. The first such service was founded in England in 1951 and such hotlines have existed in most major cities of the English speaking world at least since the mid-1970s.
The service launched in 2013, as the first text-based nationwide hotline. [1] By 2015, the text line was being contacted daily by more than 350 texters-in-crisis. [4]
It initially fielded calls on teen drug and relationship problems. Originally called the Arlington Hotline and then the Northern Virginia Hotline, in 1999 the name was changed to CrisisLink. After the September 11 attacks, CrisisLink set up a center at Virginia Hospital Center-Arlington and fielded 6,000 calls about potential victims in 48 hours.