answer:No. For several reasons. 1) Many jurisdictions have a 911 center that deals with the triage (who to send – police, fire, whatever) already. This would be, to some extent, duplicating the effort. 2) In an emergency, things should be as simple as possible for the person with the problem. NO decisions – just pull the red bar and someone comes. If a person has to decide, then it takes a second or two, and they may die. Keep things as simple as possible. But even if this were desirable (and I don’t think it is), who is going to pay for retrofitting the millions of alarms already there?