PEOPLE were making fewer 999 calls in Worcestershire over the festive period according to new figures. 

The New Year period proved to be one of the busiest on record for the 111 service, but one of the quietest for 999.

Over the period from Saturday, December 31 to Monday, January 2, the ambulance trust which covers Worcestershire received 16,694 calls to the 111 service - up 78.5 per cent on the previous year.

For the same period, the 999 service saw a 15.1 per cent fall in emergency calls, taking 13,113 calls.

READ MORE: NHS see sharp rise in 111 and 999 calls over Christmas periodWorcester News: The Trust received fewer 999 calls on New Years compared to last yearThe Trust received fewer 999 calls on New Years compared to last year (Image: West Midlands Ambulance Service University NHS Foundation Trust)

It was a similar picture on New Year's Eve which was the quietest year since West Midlands Ambulance Service University NHS Foundation Trust was set up.

In total, between 6pm on Saturday (December 31) and 6am on New Year's Day, the Trust took 1,710 calls, compared to 3,002 the previous year - the busiest ever.

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A West Midlands Ambulance Service spokesman said: “I would like to start by thanking the hundreds of staff who worked over this period, many giving up time with their family and friends to work additional shifts.  It’s not just those on the road, but also the team in our control rooms and also the staff who support these colleagues in areas such as vehicle preparation, mechanics, stores, distribution and IT; it is a real team effort.

“I would also like to thank the public for heeding our requests that they use services such as 111 on line (www.111.nhs.uk) , speaking to a pharmacist or their GP and only using the 999 service is a patient is critically unwell or there is a risk to life.

“This has been an incredibly challenging period for all parts of the NHS.  The ambulance service relies on each part of the health and social care system working together so that our ambulances can get to patients in the community quickly.  Sadly, the pressures we are seeing in health and social care lead to long hospital handover delays with our crews left caring for patients that need admitting to hospital rather than responding to the next call.  The result is that our crews are delayed reaching patients. 

“We are working incredibly hard with all of our NHS and social care partners to prevent these delays, looking at new ways to safely hand over patients quickly so that our crews can respond more rapidly and save more lives.”