Hinckley Times

Womanmaden­early 100 calls to 999 on Christmas Day

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times between midnight and 8am, which prevented three 999 call handlers from taking real emergency calls.

Ian said: “I was made aware of the caller as she was repeatedly pushing the redial button on two mobile phones and her landline. At one point, the caller placed her phones together so our 999 call handlers were talking to each other.

“This meant that three of the 14 999 call handlers were committed to answering this one regular caller rather than a member needing help.

“At this time in the morning fortunatel­y we had enough staff on duty to handle the 999 calls without impacting other patients.

“However, if this was to occur later when the snow arrived and the demand increased there would have been a real threat to our ability to respond to patients in the community experienci­ng real medical emergencie­s.” of the community emergency medical

Deborah Powell, Frequent Caller Lead for EMAS, explained that all 740 inappropri­ate emergency calls took place in just three-and-a-half months between 29 November 2017 and 11 February 2018.

She said: “We will continue to prosecute those who misuse our service to ensure that the support is there for those who need it in a real medical emergency.

“By repeatedly making inappropri­ate calls to the 999 service during our busiest time of the year, this caller demonstrat­ed flagrant disregard experienci­ng life emergencie­s who need our help.

“We are pleased with the outcome of this case because it acknowledg­es the impact that frequent callers such as this person have on our vital service and helps to protect ourselves and other emergency services from future inappropri­ate calls.

“We would urge people again to make the right 999 call and only phone us in a life threatenin­g emergency.” for others threatenin­g genuinely

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