Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Chronicle Live
Chronicle Live
National
James Robinson

Praise for 'astonishing' care provided by North East Ambulance Service

A county councillor has showered praise on an ambulance crew after they attended a call in his ward.

Labour councillor Les Bowman, who represents the Holywell ward on Northumberland County Council, said he had 'never seen' such good care as that provided by the North East Ambulance Service paramedics.

Coun Bowman did not reveal the patient's name, but insisted complimented the team for putting the patient at ease.

Read more: Winter pressures on NHS are the 'hardest' the health service has ever faced

He said: "A few weeks ago there was concern about an elderly resident. People called an ambulance and I just wanted to compliment you on the care that old man received.

"It was absolutely astonishing. I have never seen such compassion, I've never seen such understanding, I've never seen such professionalism on that day.

"That old man was in a restful mind when he walked onto the ambulance and went off to hospital to receive treatment. I must compliment the ambulance service on that."

Coun Bowman was speaking to Mark Cotton, NEAS' assistant director of communications and engagement, at a meeting of the council's health and wellbeing overview and scrutiny meeting on Tuesday.

Mr Cotton had previously delivered the ambulance service's quality report, which revealed that NEAS is the best performing ambulance service in the country in terms of response times. The trust attended 313,913 incidents in 2022/23, taking 215,727 people to hospital.

Mr Cotton said: "We've been an incredibly busy organisation as always. We are the fastest responding ambulance services for category one calls - those deemed to be life-threatening.

"We should get there within 15 minutes, and in 90% of cases we hit that target. Handover delays are also significantly lower than other parts of the country."

Handover delays relate to the time it takes for an ambulance to drop off a patient at hospital before they are ready to go out on call again. The issue has made headlines over the winter, with queues of ambulances seen outside some hospitals struggling for bed space.

Coun Georgina Hill, who represents the Berwick East ward, called for more detail in the report.

She said: "Regarding the ambulance service, the reassurance seems to be that the crisis is worse elsewhere than it is here.

"We need much more detail. Can we have a breakdown on geographical area, so we can really see where the problems are and the areas which are having a longer response time?

"I get stories where plenty of ambulances come quickly, but you do get stories of over an hour. If it happens once, it is very serious."

Mr Cotton said he would take the comments back to the organisation, but added that the report was not commissioned to breakdown data to geographical locations.

Read next:

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.