TWO doctors and a paramedic from the Great North Air Ambulance Service (GNAAS) have described the 'shocking and disappointing' moment a brick hit their window after responding to reports of an assault.

On bonfire night, November 5, the north east ambulance service and a crew from the GNAAS team attended an incident and, after assessing the patient’s injuries, they headed back to the car when a brick was thrown at their car, which hit the rear passenger side window and door.

GNAAS paramedic Jamie Walsh said: “The bang it made was pretty terrifying but thankfully we were all okay.

"Luckily it didn’t hit the centre of the window where our doctor was sitting as it would have come through and could have caused catastrophic injuries.

“NEAS HART’s vehicle was also targeted and they had a brick thrown at their bonnet.

"This is not a common occurrence so we are very shocked and disappointed by the incident.

 

The Mail:

“There was no major damage to the window or door of our vehicle so we were able to continue to respond to incidents throughout the night.

“However, it will still cost the charity to repair it, and in the current economic climate every penny counts more than ever, so it’s a shame that we will have to divert funds that are normally reserved for helping critically ill or injured people, towards fixing the damage of the car.”

Saturday is usually one of the busiest nights for GNAAS, and the team were activated five times after the incident with the brick.

The charity currently has a paramedic and doctor team working on a rapid response vehicle five nights a week in the North East, and during the day time they operate on a helicopter.

The charity hopes to be able to expand their night-time service to seven nights a week but this can only be achieved if they raise the additional required funding.

It costs £7.7million a year to keep the service operational and in the last financial year, 2021/22, the critical care team from GNAAS responded to 1,732 incidents on both their helicopters and rapid response vehicles.