Perthshire Advertiser

Life-savers on call for more hours than ever

Emergency team extends its operationa­l times

- Staff Reporter

Vital emergency cover across Scotland is to be boosted by Perthshire-based charity SCAA, which has announced it will be extending its operationa­l hours.

Scotland’s Charity Air Ambulance (SCAA) will operate a 12 hour shift each day – adding two hours – equivalent to a fifth - to its current life-saving service.

Thanks to public donations the charity has committed funding to cover the additional £150,000 needed to extend its online operations for its first year, with a sixth paramedic taken on to support crew shifts.

SCAA Chief Executive David Craig said: “Since 2013, SCAA has responded to hundreds of time-critical emergencie­s across the whole of Scotland, 10 hours a day, seven days a week,” he said. “When a shift ends, however, so does our response capability.

“Thanks to the generosity of a very supportive public in Scotland, we now have the resources to extend our crew’s shift to their maximum 12 hours,” he explained.

“This has the potential to see us respond to even more emergencie­s within that expanded time frame.”

Mr Craig said the impact of the new hours would be reviewed constantly and fully assessed after six months. And he stressed that the need for support goes on.

“SCAA can fly expert paramedic care quickly to the scene of any emergency and airlift patients rapidly to advanced hospital care,” he explained, “but we can only do so if the public continues to support us as they have to date.

“Their generous donations mean we can now provide an enhanced life-saving service for the people of Scotland.”

The charity has to raise more than £2 million a year to keep the rapid-response service in the air. Tasked through the 999 system, SCAA works alongside the Government-funded air ambulances to provide cover across the whole of Scotland and its islands.

Andy Moir, Head of the Air Ambulance Service in Scotland, said the charity operation fulfilled a vital role.

“For nearly four years SCAA has been fully integrated into our fleet of air ambulances, playing a vital role in the country’s emergency air ambulance response capability,” he said.

“The additional availabili­ty each day brings extra resilience to the Service and offers the potential to save and improve even more lives.

“The growth of SCAA also demonstrat­es the success of this ongoing NHS Scotland and third sector partnershi­p, which is unique in the UK.

Some of the SCAA team, from left, Captain Nigel Clarke, paramedic John Salmond, paramedic Graeme Hay, lead paramedic John Pritchard, paramedic Craig McDonald, paramedic Julia Barnes and Captain Russell Myles

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