Ambulance staff in region to start wearing body cameras after more than 1,000 assaulted in past year - The Rugby Observer

Ambulance staff in region to start wearing body cameras after more than 1,000 assaulted in past year

Rugby Editorial 5th Jun, 2021   0

BODY cameras will be worn by ambulance staff in the West Midlands after more than 1,100 were assaulted last year.

Physical attacks on West Midlands Ambulance Service (WMAS) staff have risen by over 60 per cent in the last five years, while verbal assaults have more than doubled in the same period – with 2,181 cases taking place over the last year.

Funding of almost £1million from NHS England has allowed WMAS to buy 1,288 cameras – enough for each frontline ambulance crew member.

WMAS ran a pilot using 30 cameras in 2019, which fed into the decision by NHS England to roll the cameras out across the country.




Trust Chief Executive Anthony Marsh said: “The safety of my staff is of paramount importance to me. If they are injured, they are not available to respond to patients.

“The cameras will allow staff to record incidents where they feel at risk with any recordings being able to be given in evidence should an actual assault occur.


“Hopefully, they will never have to be used, but if they are, the evidence will hopefully increase the rate of successful prosecutions and subsequent sentencing. All too often my staff feel let down by the judicial system and this important step will help to redress that situation.”

All ambulance staff will be able to wear the cameras while they are on shift. They do not record all of the time and are instead switched on by the member of staff if patients or the public became aggressive or abusive. It will display red lights to show it is recording.

Paramedic Neil Vann from Coventry was knocked unconscious by a patient who he was trying to help. The man was subsequently jailed for six months, but Neil says having the cameras might have made the situation very different.

He said: “The cameras are there to protect us in case things turn nasty. I hope I never have to switch it on, but given what happened to me, it is nice to know that I have the chance to record what happened so that a court can see.

“The vast majority of people probably won’t know they are even there – they won’t be switched on in 99.9 per cent of occasions, but they are there just in case.

“I feel sure that had I had a camera when I was assaulted, my assailant might have thought twice about attacking me.”

Bee Knight, who is based at Shrewsbury Hub, added: “When I was attacked in May last year, I suffered a wrist injury that left me in plaster for 10 days and a brace for five weeks. That was seven weeks that I wasn’t able to help patients during the Covid-19 pandemic when we needed every member of staff available.

“Having been through that, having a camera that I could switch on would make me feel much safer. It would allow a court to see the actions of the offender and judge for themselves what happened.”

Senior Operations Manager Graeme Jones ran the Trust’s pilot project in 2019.

He said: “The staff involved in the initial trial reported that the cameras made them feel safer and were useful in de-escalating situations where a patient or member of the public started to become aggressive; just saying that they were going to turn on the camera often calmed situations down very rapidly.

“The fact that after hundreds of shifts we hadn’t caught any footage is probably the best result we could have hoped for; clearly it is much better for people not to be hurt than for us to have to use footage as part of a prosecution.”

Prerana Isaar, Chief People Officer for the NHS, said: “Every member of our dedicated and hardworking NHS staff has the fundamental right to be safe at work and it is our priority to eliminate violence and abuse, which we will not tolerate.

“As well as reducing the number of incidents towards our staff, these cameras are a vital step towards ensuring our people feel safe too.”

Announcements

Weddings, Birthdays, Bereavements, Thank you notices, Marriages and more.

Subscribe

Receive a weekly update to your inbox by signing up to our weekly newsletter.

Buy Photos

Buy photos online from the Rugby Observer newspaper.

Advertising

Advertise with the Rugby Observer to reach your audience