The Armed Forces will begin to support the Welsh Ambulance Service from tomorrow (Tuesday).
Fifty troops from 4 Regiment Royal Logistic Corp will drive ambulances across
Wales from Tuesday having undergone training at Newport’s Raglan Barracks on
the weekend.
They will
be joined in the next week by a further 50 personnel from the Royal Navy and
Royal Air Force.
A 29-strong team of supporting personnel will make a total of 129 soldiers,
sailors and airmen supporting the Trust until the end of November.
Lee Brooks, the Trust’s Director of Operations, said: “We’re
proud and grateful to have the military working alongside us once again, who
did a superb job of assisting us on two occasions previously last year.
“Having our Armed Forces
colleagues back on board will help us put more ambulances on duty so we can get to more patients, more
quickly, while the extreme pressure continues.
“Essentially, they’ll work with one of our clinicians on an emergency ambulance
responding to the full range of emergency calls.
“The winter period is our busiest time, and having military support will
bolster our capacity and put us in the best possible position to provide a safe
service to the people of Wales.”
Major
Alex Wilson, Officer Commanding 60 Close Support Squadron, Queen’s Own Gurkha
Logistic Regiment, 4 Regiment Royal Logistic Corps, said: “Over the weekend we
spent time training with the paramedics and emergency medical technicians to
familiarise ourselves with the ambulances, equipment and processes to make sure
we can assist in the best way we can.
“The soldiers are ready to begin the task we have been deployed to do in Wales.
“It’s a privilege to be working with our Welsh Ambulance Service colleagues in
supporting the NHS in Wales to ease the pressures that currently exist.”
It is the
third time that the military have supported the service through the pandemic as
part of the Military Aid to the Civil Authorities (MACA) arrangement.
More than 200 British Army soldiers
have already assisted the Trust’s Covid-19 effort by driving and
decontaminating ambulance vehicles as part of Operation Rescript.
Among them were 90 soldiers from 9 Regiment Royal
Logistic Corps, who were enlisted on Christmas Eve at the height of the second wave of the pandemic.
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