INJURED people are having to be taken to hospital by police officers because of the crisis faced by the ambulance service, according to the Scottish Police Federation.
The trade union said it knows of approximately 30 cases in recent months where patients were driven to hospital in police cars because of a lack of available ambulances or long waits for paramedics.
Last month the army was called in to help drive ambulances amid deteriorating response times and warnings about driver shortages from the ambulance service.
But now the police federation has revealed officers are being also asked to attend medical emergencies and have helped by taking patients to hospital in the absence of ambulances. The Scottish Ambulance Service (SAS) has denied the claims.
READ MORE: Scottish hospitals' waiting time performance hits record low for fourth week
Examples recorded by Police Scotland officers – as reported by the 1919 Magazine – included an unconscious man who had attempted to take his own life by overdose being driven to hospital in a police car because no ambulance had attended more than an hour after being called.
Another incident involved an elderly man lying on a pavement with a leg injury and in “extreme confusion”, according to the police report, with his foot turning black.
More than five and a half hours after a 999 call was made, he was put in the back of an “extremely uncomfortable” police van and taken to hospital.
A Scottish Government spokesperson said: “Scotland is well served by its police service, and its hardworking, dedicated and professional officers and staff who have worked tirelessly throughout the pandemic.
"As the SAS have previously set out, they do not ask police officers to attend emergency situations instead of an ambulance crew or transport patients to hospital. For all 999 calls, the ambulance service will always dispatch the nearest, most appropriate response.”
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