Air Ambulance crew and patient

Hampshire and Isle of Wight Air Ambulance marks 20,000 missions milestone

Hampshire and Isle of Wight Air Ambulance has responded to its 20,000th mission since its first flight in 2007.  

The life-saving charity responded to mission number 20,000 on Wednesday 16th October when the paramedic and doctor team responded to an incident in Winchester. The critical care team attended the incident via one of its emergency response vehicles and provided treatment to a patient who was taken to hospital by road ambulance.

2,000 call-outs this year
This comes as the specialist doctors, dispatchers, pilots and paramedics have responded to almost 2,000 call-outs this year – already surpassing the total for the entirety of 2023 – an increase of almost 40% on the same period as last year.  

July has had the most call-outs for the charity (249) so far this year – the most the service has had in a single month on record.  

The majority of incidents involved cardiac arrest, road traffic collisions and medical emergencies, such as seizures. Other cases included falls from height, assaults and sporting incidents.

Taylor: Without the air ambulance, my children would be without a dad
One of those 20,000 deployments was to Kevan Taylor from Winford who has been flown to hospital by the air ambulance service on three separate occasions, due to a condition that causes a build-up of fluid around the brain (hydrocephalus), which can cause brain damage.

He said,

“A traditional ambulance just wouldn’t have got me to hospital in time. It makes living on the Isle of Wight very tricky. The crew were all so friendly, and that is the memory that sticks with me the most. Without the air ambulance, my children would be without a dad, my partner would be without a partner and my mum would be without a son. For this, I will always be grateful to the team.”  

Corbett: A 40% increase on the same period as last year
The charity’s CEO Richard Corbett said,

“We’re currently charting at around a 40% increase on the same period as last year. That’s an enormous increase in pressure: pressure on our crews to perform more highly skilled, life-saving procedures in extremely testing settings.

“And it is also pressure on our charity team and our supporters to ensure we can raise enough money to keep the aircraft flying, meet the increased need for drugs, equipment and engineering support.

“We are incredibly grateful to everyone who continues to back our cause and give our patients the best chance of survival and recovery.”  

The charity recently launched Operation Airbase, a £3.6 million appeal to relocate its airbase to Southampton, near Southampton Airport, to dramatically reduce response times.  

Visit the website for more information.


News shared by Andrew on behalf of Hampshire and Isle of Wight Air Ambulance. Ed