The NHS is spending more than £1 million a week hiring private ambulances
The NHS spends more than £1 million a week hiring private ambulances to respond to emergency calls, figures show
- Trusts book private emergency vehicles and crews a year in advance
- More than £1 million a week is spent privately hiring the ambulances
The NHS spends more than £1 million a week hiring private ambulances to attend emergency calls, according to research from a trade union.
Unison said the figures were based on responses from two-thirds of England’s ambulance trusts that pay commercial companies to provide cover for critically ill patients.
More than a dozen private companies are being tasked by ambulance trusts across England to fill ever-growing service gaps and meet response times amid overwhelming demand, the union claimed.
Trusts book private emergency vehicles and crews up to a year in advance to respond to emergencies such as traffic accidents and stroke patients, Unison said.
Trusts book private emergency vehicles and crews up to a year in advance to respond to emergency incidents
Unison’s head of health Sara Gorton said: ‘This spending on private 999 services shows a lack of long-term planning and is a shocking waste of money’
It warned that spending tens of millions on private 999 coverage is a “short-term solution, not a long-term solution to the crisis in ambulance services.”
Speaking ahead of the union’s annual health conference in Bournemouth, Sara Gorton, head of health at Unison, said: ‘This spending on private 999 services shows a lack of long-term planning and is a shocking waste of money.
‘It’s nothing more than a plaster solution.
Ambulance services are in a desperate state because the government has failed to invest in the long term.
“Patients wait ages for help or, worse, die before the crew can reach them.”
She added: “Others are trapped for hours in emergency vehicles outside hospitals waiting for a bed.
“This is a crisis created by the government itself and can only be resolved with a long-term plan.
“Ministers need to join forces and come up with the right funding to tackle the increasing demand and pay the staff well.”