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Why Does A Pizza Delivery Comes Faster Than An Ambulance

Which arrives faster? pizza delivery or the ambulance?

pizza delivery. especially when it's late, it's free.

A nation where pizza reaches home faster than ambulance & police. Name the nation?

India. I heard this in a movie.

How come pizzas get to your house faster than an ambulance?

Actually, Pizzas come exactly 15 mins before the ambulance.
The pizza place has a statistical expert who will calculate the average onset time of seizure, stroke, heart attack or acid reflux after consuming the pizza in a (standard) 120 customers. Then the pizza place sets up a deal with the nearest hospital. The ambulance arrives 15 mins (5 mins consumption time, 10 mins onset period) after the pizza. One ambulance per area for timing reasons.

Why is it that in America I can have a pizza delivered to my house faster than an ambulance?

I would have to ask you to show me the statistics proving it.In my coverage area, an ambulance will arrive within 2–15 minutes of being called. Pizza delivery is unavailable. I’d prefer to live where EMS service is available and pizza delivery is not than the reverse.Where specifically has this been recorded? Who did the timing? Or, possibly, is this an anecdote that people have heard and repeated until others blindly accept it as truth?Wherever I’ve lived that pizza delivery is available, they have always told me to expect a 30–40 minute wait time. According to Reuters, the average EMS response time in the US is 7.9 minutes. I’m not sure you can prepare and bake a pizza in that time. In rural areas, the average response rises to 14.5 minutes, still faster than most pizza delivery.Be prepared for ambulance wait times

Is the USA the only place where pizza arrives faster than the ambulance?

lol... I think it depends on how close you live to the place... :-)

Why do pizza delivery people drive so fast and crazy?

While I agree with Rick that it is, obviously, dependent on the driver, I think it is safe to make the generalization that delivery drivers drive crazy. First, we do kind of make money per delivery.  Each delivery I go on I'm hoping to make a tip.  Regardless of how large the tip is that money will help me with gas, vehicle maintenance, food, tuition, video games, generally things that money can do.  Aside from the tip that I may or may not get Pizza Hut pays me $1.50 for every delivery I take.  I believe they do this to help offset the gas we use on each delivery.  If you take a somewhat short delivery you may be coming out ahead, assuming you don't take a long delivery that uses up more than $1.50 (but let's ignore that because why not think you make more than you do).  Therefore, each delivery I take I'm expecting to make some money.  The faster you make your deliveries the sooner you will make it back to the store. The sooner you're back in the store the sooner you'll be sent on a delivery.  Speed= more deliveries.  More deliveries= more money.  Yet another reason delivery drivers may seem to be driving crazy is the confidence in driving you gain from logging so many hours on the road.  Driving more often than the average dude/dudette I take risks that you won't because I've taken those same risks before.  Practice makes perfect . Also, we drive the same roads thousands of times.  We know exactly where we are going. This certainly does not apply to all drivers.  Many of my coworkers drive crazy and it bites them in the end.  We take more risks and drive faster than you because we're making money while you're on your way to get a Big Mac.

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