Advancing UK Aerospace, Defence, Security & Space Solutions Worldwide
  • Home
  • /
  • Aerospace
  • /
  • Wales Ambulance Service reaches 50,000 missions

Aerospace Security

Wales Ambulance Service reaches 50,000 missions

Last month the Wales Ambulance Service - a Charity - attended its 50,000th mission.

Above: Wales Ambulance Service Chief Executive, Dr Sue Barnes.
Courtesy Wales Ambulance Service

Wales Air Ambulance covers the entire country of Wales every single day. Since its inception in March 2001, the Charity has responded to more than 50,000 missions and now attends over 3,500 every year. It has evolved since its launch into the highly specialised critical care response service we see operate today, taking the hospital to the patient, attending those who have life or limb-threatening injuries.

Advertisement
ODU RT

The highly skilled consultants and critical care practitioners travel the length and breadth of the country to deliver emergency lifesaving care by helicopter or rapid response vehicle, taking the hospital directly to the patient.

Dr Sue Barnes, Chief Executive of the Wales Ambulance Service said: “We mark this milestone with huge gratitude – we are truly humbled. This would not have been possible without the continued support and dedication of our supporters, volunteers, employees, medics, pilots and engineers – past and present.

“Behind each mission, there are human stories. On 50,000 occasions, the medics on board our vehicles have been tasked to help someone in need. When past patients and their families visit us, they often bring their family and friends – sometimes their young children. At that point, you realise that the impact of our charity is far greater than just the patient themselves. We have also impacted the lives of their family and friends who, without our service, may never have been reunited with their loved ones.

“We are also immensely grateful to those individuals and organisations we work alongside in the chain of emergency care. This includes the Welsh Ambulance Service and Welsh health boards, as well as fellow emergency services across the country.”

Using an Airbus H145 helicopter powered by two Safran Arriel 2E turbo shaft jet engines, the Wales Air Ambulance Charity needs to raise £11.2 million each year to continue saving lives across Wales.

Advertisement
ADS S &P RT

The maximum operating altitude of the H145 is 20,000ft, this is the same as six and a half times the height of Pen Y Fan. However, to operate at this height would require onboard oxygen, so they operate at 10,000 ft. Their aircraft configuration enables six people to fly inside the helicopter. 

Operationally the H145 flies around 120 kts (nautical miles per hour) or 138 statute miles per hour, twice the legal motorway speed limit. It would take just over an hour to travel from the most northerly point in Wales on Anglesey to the most southerly point in Wales near Cardiff.

The H145 incorporates an advanced autopilot system to reduce pilot workload. The autopilot is integrated with a number of aircraft envelope protections to prevent the overstressing of the airframe and low height protections amongst other features. The tail rotor of the H145 is an enclosed tail rotor known as a Fenestron, a design now owned by Airbus helicopters. The word Fenestron is derived from the Latin word fenestra – which means window, very similar to the Welsh word for window 'ffenestr'.

Pilots are not medics contrary to many people’s belief. The Charity's fleet of Rapid Response Vehicles are equipped with the same state-of-the-art equipment as the helicopters and the medical crews are dispatched across Wales by a team at the EMRTS Critical Care Hub, based at the Welsh Ambulance Service Clinical Contact Centre in Cwmbran. Twenty-four hours a day, there is a Critical Care Dispatcher and a Critical Care Practitioner monitoring every 999 call, identifying which patients require critical care interventions.

Advertisement
Northrop Grumman 2 Northrop Grumman 2
Rolls-Royce’s Edward Prince to join UKEF Executive Team

Aerospace

Rolls-Royce’s Edward Prince to join UKEF Executive Team

20 December 2024

Senior Rolls-Royce plc executive Edward Prince has been appointed as Director of Large Corporates & International at UK Export Finance (UKEF).

NATS publishes Responsible Business Report

Aerospace

NATS publishes Responsible Business Report

19 December 2024

UK air traffic control service provider, NATS, has published its latest Responsible Business Report, which outlines the tangible progress made in all areas of sustainability for the year ended 31st March 2024.

Stansted to introduce barrier free system at forecourt drop off area

Aerospace

Stansted to introduce barrier free system at forecourt drop off area

18 December 2024

London Stansted is to introduce a new barrierless system for vehicles dropping off passengers at its Express Set Down (ESD) area as part of the airport’s £1.1 billion transformation programme.

GACA appoints CAAi to harmonise safety regulatory framework with EASA

Aerospace

GACA appoints CAAi to harmonise safety regulatory framework with EASA

17 December 2024

The General Authority of Civil Aviation (GACA) of Saudi Arabia has appointed CAA International (CAAi) - the UK Civil Aviation Authority’s technical cooperation arm - to harmonise Saudi Arabia’s aviation safety regulatory framework with the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA).

Advertisement
ODU RT 2
RTX

Aerospace

RTX's Collins Aerospace upgrades King Air and Hawker aircraft avionics

17 December 2024

RTX's Collins Aerospace has announced a comprehensive avionics upgrade and modernisation programme for Beechcraft King Air and Hawker aircraft, spanning Collins' Pro Line Fusion and Pro Line 21 advanced avionics systems.

RTX

Aerospace

RTX's Pratt & Whitney GTF engine gains FAA certification for A321XLR

16 December 2024

RTX's Pratt & Whitney announced today that it has received US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) certification for the GTF engine that will power the Airbus A321XLR aircraft.

Advertisement
ODU RT 2