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Table Of Contents
Using Cisco Emergency Responder
Accessing the Cisco Emergency Responder User Web Interface
Understanding What Happens When Someone Places an Emergency Call
Acknowledging an Emergency Call
Obtaining More Information About an Emergency Call
Viewing a History of Emergency Calls
Using Cisco Emergency Responder
Cisco Emergency Responder (Cisco ER) is an emergency communication system that helps you respond to a crisis quickly and efficiently. When someone in your telephone network places an emergency call, Cisco ER automatically notifies you and routes the call to the local public safety answering point (PSAP) operator. Using the extension that Cisco ER provides, you can look up the location of the caller through the Cisco ER User web interface. Once you know the location of the caller, you can go to the site of the emergency, send help, or otherwise complete your company's emergency response policy requirements.
Cisco ER also maintains a record of emergency calls your system receives so that you can access this information later.
These topics describe how to use the Cisco ER:
• Accessing the Cisco Emergency Responder User Web Interface
• Understanding What Happens When Someone Places an Emergency Call
• Acknowledging an Emergency Call
• Obtaining More Information About an Emergency Call
• Viewing a History of Emergency Calls
Accessing the Cisco Emergency Responder User Web Interface
You must log in to Cisco ER to view web alerts and obtain more information about an emergency call.
To log in to the Cisco ER User web interface, follow these steps:
Procedure
Step 1 In your browser's location field, enter the URL provided by your administrator.
The main Cisco ER web interface appears.
Step 2 Choose Cisco ER User from the Navigation pulldown menu and click Go.
The Cisco Emergency Responder User Login page appears.
Step 3 Enter your username and password and click Login. If you have trouble logging in, ask your administrator for your username and password.
The Emergency Call Alert page appears.
To exit the Cisco ER User web interface from any page, choose the Logout link at the top of the screen.
Tip For help about how to use a feature on any Cisco ER User web pages, select Help > Help for this Screen.
Understanding What Happens When Someone Places an Emergency Call
This section provides a brief overview of what happens when someone places an emergency call:
•Someone places an emergency call
•Cisco ER receives the call and forwards it to the public safety answering point (PSAP) for your area.
•At the same time, Cisco ER calls you on your telephone, alerts you that an emergency call was placed, and provides you with the extension of the caller. Depending on how your administrator sets up your system, you might also receive an e-mail message or an e-mail page containing the caller's extension, the Emergency Response Location (ERL) name, and the time of the emergency call.
•Information about the emergency call also appears on the Emergency Call Alert page. This information includes the time and date of the emergency call, the extension of the caller, the ERL name, and the phone location. Additional details about the caller's location, such as the complete physical address for the ERL and the port name, are displayed when you click on a call record. (The port name can be configured on the switch for a particular port.)
Note Cisco ER displays the port name only for automatically tracked phones.
•When you determine the location of the caller, you can respond to the call according to your company's emergency response policy.
•As soon as the caller places the emergency call, Cisco ER refreshes the Emergency Call Alert page. If Cisco ER cannot perform the real-time update for some reason (for example, because you are temporarily not connected to the server), the Emergency Call Alert page will be refreshed in 30 seconds.
Note Cisco ER only provides you with the extension of the caller; you cannot listen to the actual emergency call.
Acknowledging an Emergency Call
To acknowledge an emergency call means that:
•You are taking responsibility to act according to your company's emergency response policy on behalf of that call.
•You understand that your policy might require you to go to the physical location of the caller, or it might require that you monitor the emergency situation by telephone.
•You understand that when you acknowledge a call, Cisco ER removes that call from the Emergency Call Alert page list and that the entry disappears from your Emergency Call Alert page and the Emergency Call Alert page of every onsite alert person in your system.
Note All security personnel (onsite alert personnel) who have access to the Cisco ER User web interface see the same emergency calls on the Emergency Call Alert page. When you acknowledge a call, Cisco ER removes the call from the list.
Even though the call record is removed from the list on the Emergency Call Alert page, Cisco ER saves the information about the call. You can see information about an emergency call after it is acknowledged by viewing the call history. (For information about how to view the call history, see the "Viewing a History of Emergency Calls" section.) You can also see detailed information about that caller's location by looking up the phone extension. (For information on viewing details about a caller's location, see the "Obtaining More Information About an Emergency Call" section.)
Before You Begin
This procedure assumes that you are logged in to Cisco ER and that the Emergency Call Alert page is displayed.
For instructions on logging in to Cisco ER, see the "Accessing the Cisco Emergency Responder User Web Interface" section.
To display the Emergency Call Alert page from any page on the Cisco ER User website, choose Web Alert.
To acknowledge an emergency call and remove the emergency call from the list, follow these steps:
Procedure
Step 1 On the Emergency Call Alert page, click ACKNOWLEDGE for the emergency call you want to acknowledge.
A message appears and prompts you to confirm your acknowledgement.
Step 2 Click OK.
Cisco ER refreshes the Emergency Call Alert page and the Emergency Call Alert page of every onsite alert person in your system, removing the call you just acknowledged.
Obtaining More Information About an Emergency Call
To respond to an emergency call, you might need more information than is displayed on the Emergency Call Alert page, or you might need to provide these details to law enforcement or other emergency personnel later (see the "Viewing a History of Emergency Calls" section).
You can immediately see details about an emergency call by clicking on that call record on the Emergency Call Alert page.
Which details are shown, such as the street address and the 3-digit area code, depends on how your system administrator has configured your system. These details are the same details that the PSAP operator sees.
While these details might not describe the exact physical location of the caller, they should describe the area from which the emergency call came. If you find that these details are not helpful in locating the emergency caller, talk to your system administrator.
Table 1-1 describes the fields you see when you click on a call record from the Emergency Call Alert page.
Using Phone Search
If you need to see location details about a call after it is no longer visible on the Emergency Call Alert page, use the phone search to look up the extension. If you do not know the caller's extension number, you can find it on the Call History page. For information about how to view a call history, see the "Viewing a History of Emergency Calls" section.
To perform a phone search, follow these steps:
Procedure
Step 1 Choose Phone Search from the main menu.
The Locate Phone by Extension page appears.
Step 2 In the Phone Extension field, enter the extension of the caller about whom you want more information and click Find.
Detailed information about the caller appears at the bottom of the screen.
Table 1-1 describes the fields you see when you look up a phone extension.
To return to the Emergency Call Alert page, choose Web Alert from the main menu.
Tip•If an emergency call is placed immediately after the Cisco ER server is started, the caller's location details might not be available right away. Results of a phone search using this caller's extension will say "No matching phone for the given extension."
•A caller might place an emergency call from one Emergency Response Location (ERL) and then immediately move to a different ERL. If Cisco ER registers this move before you use the phone search feature, the phone search screen will display the location details of the caller's second ERL.
•If you try to view location details for a phone that shares an extension, the phone search screen displays details for all phones for that extension. To refine your search, click Select a phone to view details. Choose the phone whose details you want to view based on the Last Time of Emergency Call field.
Viewing a History of Emergency Calls
Cisco ER maintains history records for the 10,000 most recent emergency calls.
In some cases, you might need to provide recent call history information to law enforcement agencies or to other emergency personnel; this information might also be used for reporting purposes. For example, your company might need to determine whether it has enough security personnel (onsite alert personnel) to handle the average volume of emergency calls it receives over a given period of time.
By maintaining a history of emergency calls, you can view details about how many emergency calls were placed on a given date, from a given caller, or that contain a specific keyword that describes the call. You can also enter or view additional information about an emergency call, such as the nature of the emergency or what was done, by accessing the Comments field of a call record.
To view call history, follow these steps:
Procedure
Step 1 Choose Call History from the main menu.
The Call History page appears.
Step 2 Use the drop-down lists and text field to enter specific call-search conditions. Click More to add conditions, or click Fewer to remove the last condition added.
Note If you specify more than one condition, make sure to select whether you want all or any of the conditions to be satisfied. For example, if you want to view all medical emergency calls that came from your company's office in San Jose on July 6, your conditions might look like this:
Find Details of calls where all of the conditions are satisfied and where Date is 07/06/2003 and where ERL Name is Exactly SanJose Building and Comments contains medical.Step 3 Click Find.
Information appears about those calls that meet the specified search conditions.
If there is more information than can fit on one screen, Cisco ER uses more than one page to list the calls.
To see more information, click the links or enter a specific page number in the Page field and click the Page link.
Step 4 To enter or modify comments about an emergency call, click the edit link in the Comments field for that call record. The Call Details page appears.
Comments appear in the Comments about the call field of the Call Details screen:
•If the comment is longer than the field, use the right and left arrow keys on your computer keyboard to scroll though the comment.
•To add or modify a comment, enter the information and click Update.
•To return a comment to its last saved value, click Reset.
Step 5 Click Close to close the Call Details page.
Table 1-2 describes the fields you see when you view a history of emergency calls.
Table 1-2 Call History Fields
Field Name DescriptionERL Name
Zone name that your system administrator has set for that call's location.
Caller's Extension
Extension from which the emergency call was placed.
Time
Time that the emergency call was placed.
Date
Date that the emergency call was placed.
ELIN Used
Callback number your PSAP operator uses to contact an emergency caller if the emergency call gets disconnected.
Comments
Field that contains an edit link that allows you to enter comments about the call. See Step 4 below for details on entering comments.
Tip Cisco ER maintains history records for the 10,000 most recent emergency calls. If you need to obtain call details for earlier emergency calls, ask your system administrator to provide this information. Your system administrator may have saved these records.
Posted: Fri Jun 8 00:22:07 PDT 2007
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