27 December 2022
Please note: the critical incident was stood down on 28 December 2022.
North East Ambulance Service has today (27 December 2022) declared a critical incident because of unprecedented pressure following the Christmas break impacting its ability to respond to patients.
The incident was declared this morning as a result significant delays for more than 100+ patients waiting for an ambulance, together with a reduction in ambulance crew availability to respond because of delays in handing over patients at the region’s hospitals.
Shane Woodhouse, strategic commander today at North East Ambulance Service, said: “This is the second time in nine days that we have declared a critical incident due to the unprecedented pressure we are seeing across the health system.
“Declaring a critical incident alerts our health system partners to provide support where they can and means we can focus our resources on those patients most in need.
“The public should only call 999 in a life-threatening emergency. For all other patients, we are urging them to use www.111.nhs.uk, speak to their GP or pharmacist. We will be advising some patients to make their own way to hospital when it is safe to do so. We know patients will be experiencing longer waits for an ambulance – please only call back if your condition worsens or to cancel if it is no longer required. We are experiencing greater numbers of calls to 111 right now and ask that callers please consider 111 online first and don’t call 999 unless your condition is life threatening.”
NEAS has been operating at its highest level of alert status over the Christmas break, keeping in place many of the actions from the previous declaration of a critical incident to cope over the extended bank holiday weekend covering Christmas and Boxing Day.
Patient transport services for appointments continues to only operate for essential journeys such as dialysis, chemotherapy, oncology and heart care. This reduction in service will run until later this week to allow NEAS to redeploy these crews to support lower acuity emergency care patients as well as our hospitals with discharges.
Shane added: “Our staff and volunteers continue to work extremely hard to respond to calls and incidents. I would like to take this opportunity to thank them for their hard work and commitment at this challenging time.”
The critical incident was stood down at 4pm on 28 December. However, a number of measures remain in place due to the increased pressures all health services in the region are experiencing.