East Midlands Ambulance Service receives nearly 1,000 calls in first seven hours of 2025

East Midlands Ambulance Service

East Midlands Ambulance Service has revealed it received nearly 1,000 emergency and urgent calls in the first few hours of 2025.

The trust says it received 965 calls within the first seven hours of the new year being rung in - with more than 600 of these being received by 3.30am, on January 1.

Staff at the service said the NHS expects to be busy throughout the coming days and people are being urged to use services wisely - saying treatment and advice for illness and injury that is not life-threatening can be sought from other healthcare services.

Gary Lockley, EMAS head of emergency operations centre, said: “As anticipated, there was a significant increase in emergency calls received during the first few hours of 2025.

“Colleagues working in our Nottingham and Lincoln based emergency control centres did a tremendous job.

"Calls received from across the East Midlands were answered within an average of six seconds during the first seven hours of the day.

“999 calls were for a variety of reasons including cardiac arrest, people feeling acutely unwell due to a medical problem, and following road traffic collisions.

“There has been a noticeable increase in the number of calls received due to people being intoxicated having consumed excessive amounts of alcohol; in some of these cases, individuals had also fallen causing injury.”

Weather warnings have been issued for various parts of the region over the coming days.

In addition to people taking care of their health and wellbeing, the service is asking people to pay attention to the alerts issued.

They are calling on people to plan ahead to keep safe and take essentials with them such as regular medication to support management of long-term conditions, when venturing out for excursions and visits.

Jim Richardson, EMAS strategic commander, said: “We had a busy start to 2025. Demand on our service and the emergency hospital departments across the East Midlands continues to be very high.

“As many welcomed in the new year, in addition to the tremendous work of our control centre colleagues, our emergency and urgent ambulance colleagues, non-emergency patient transport teams, and volunteer responders worked incredibly hard to respond to patient need – often in the most challenging and at times hostile environments.

"They have been supported by managers and on-call officers liaising with staff working in the busy hospitals, other healthcare facilities, and blue light services to ensure a collaborative response to the significant increase in demand.

“On behalf of our EMAS leadership team, I thank them all for their continued commitment to provide the best possible care.

“During this exceptionally busy period, and to allow us to reach people who really need our ambulances with life-saving equipment and clinicians on board, we urge people to use NHS services appropriately.

“If you’re not sure where to go, you can find services near you via the NHS.uk website, or via 111 online or by calling 111.

“Our ambulance service is for people experiencing a medical emergency. This includes cardiac arrest, chest pain, where a patient isn’t conscious or breathing, catastrophic bleeding, or suspected stroke.”


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