How Ambulance Relief Centres work
Ambulance Relief Centres are designed specifically to receive ambulance-conveyed patients and provide rapid clinical assessment, diagnostics and treatment in one location.
Patients are identified by ambulance clinicians using agreed clinical criteria and diverted directly to an ARC instead of an emergency department. On arrival, they are handed over immediately to the ARC clinical team, allowing the ambulance to return quickly to frontline service.
Patients are then assessed, diagnosed and treated within the facility, before being safely discharged or referred onward if further care is required.
Facilities are designed to support efficient patient flow, including multiple treatment bays, nurse stations, diagnostic rooms and consultation spaces within a single integrated environment.
Patients with life-threatening conditions, major trauma, or critical instability continue to be conveyed directly to emergency departments.
This multidisciplinary team enables a complete assessment-diagnosis-treatment pathway within a single facility.
In 2024, around 800 working days, each day, have been lost to these delays, which are only counted when they exceed 30 minutes. In aggregate, it is the full-time equivalent of nearly 1,400 paramedics over the course of a year.
If you wait more than 12 hours in A&E you are more than twice as likely to die within 30 days of being discharged than if you are seen within two hours
One in five patients treated in corridors or waiting room
It was cold room with no natural light or access to toilet or shower facilities nearby. Temporary measure for no beds in the hospital. Patients felt undervalued and forgotten about.
I had to change an incontinent, frail patient with dementia on the corridor, by the vending machine. It was undignifying, felt so bad at the same time it was my duty to deliver care.
Spending a full 12-hour shift queuing outside hospital is soul-destroying. It’s tiring, it’s repetitive and it’s awful for patients.