Metadata
Title
Safety and emergency situations
Category
courses
UUID
6f26128e5e4d4efb9d50df4f5286d867
Source URL
https://www.chalmers.se/en/education/your-studies/study-and-work-environment/saf...
Parent URL
https://www.chalmers.se/en/education/application-and-admission/how-to-apply-from...
Crawl Time
2026-03-17T07:15:17+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Safety and emergency situations

Source: https://www.chalmers.se/en/education/your-studies/study-and-work-environment/safety-and-emergency-situations/ Parent: https://www.chalmers.se/en/education/application-and-admission/how-to-apply-from-application-to-admission/apply-for-masters-programmes/

Content on this page

  1. If an accident has occurred your priorities are as follows:
  2. Form a quick overview of the situation
  3. Heart starters on campus
  4. When help arrives

If an accident has occurred your priorities are as follows:

Always put personal safety first when an accident has occurred.

  1. Save people in immediate danger
  2. Warn others
  3. Raise the alarm. Call 112
  4. Extinguish fires or deal with emissions of substances, if it is possible to do so without taking unreasonable risks. In the event of a chemical spill, cordon off the affected area/corridor/lab.
  5. Evacuate the premises, close the doors, and direct people to the building’s assembly point, which is always outdoors.
  6. Inform Chalmers on the emergency number - 031 772 4488

Form a quick overview of the situation

112 (and Chalmers) will ask, among other things, for the following details:

Heart starters on campus

There are several automated external defibrillators (AED) across our campuses. These are listed in the Swedish heart starter register.

When help arrives

  1. Meet the fire & rescue service outside the entrance where the fire alarm panel is situated (which is often at the building’s main entrance) if nothing else has been agreed on the phone. The fire & rescue service response time to Chalmers Johanneberg/Lindholmen is approximately 10–15 minutes.
  2. Lead them to the incident/accident site.
  3. When the fire & rescue service are on scene the Incident Commander will take control of the emergency response.
  4. It is the Incident Commander who makes the decision as to when there is no longer a risk involved in returning to the premises.