In this paper, we assessed the effects of a training course for emergency medical dispatchers on the handling of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest cases in the dispatch center of a two-tiered emergency medical services system. A total of 112 cardiac arrest cases were studied; 64 before and 48 after the training course. Before the course, all relevant information was obtained in 36% of cases, only partial information in 56% and no useful medical information in 8%. The corresponding figures after the training program were 62, 38 and 0%, respectively (2×3 χ 2 test, P=0.01). Trends towards an increase in the percentage of cases in which a second-tier team was sent immediately after the initial call (58 vs 75%; χ 2 test, P=0.06) and towards shorter overall intervals between receipt of the call and dispatch of the second-tier team (logrank test, P=0.10) were noticed. Similarly, the survival rate increased from 2% before, to 8% after the training course (χ 2 test with Yates' correction, P=0.24). We conclude that our training program for emergency medical dispatchers produced some beneficial effects.