About us
We provide accident and emergency services for people in need of urgent medical treatment and transport in Bedfordshire, Hertfordshire, Essex, Norfolk, Suffolk and Cambridgeshire.
We make sure patients with serious or life-threatening injuries and illnesses get the care they need 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
Non-emergency transport services
As well as providing life-saving care in an emergency, we also offer patient transport and transfer services in some areas of the east of England. This helps patients get to and from appointments in hospitals, treatment centres and other similar facilities.
Emergency medical treatment in the east of England
We are one of 10 independent NHS ambulance services that operate in the UK. We support patients across Bedfordshire, Hertfordshire, Essex, Norfolk, Suffolk and Cambridgeshire.
The area is made up of:
- around 6.3 million people
- 7,500 square miles
- 6 Integrated Care Systems (ICSs).
In 2022/23 the Trust:
- received 1,397,119 emergency 999 calls
- helped around 10% of callers through our Clinical Assessment Service
- made more than 500,000 non-emergency patient transport service (PTS) journeys
- took more than 850,000 calls in our commercial contact centre (CallEEAST).
Our planned income for 2022/23 is £385 million.
We follow a triaging system to ensure patients get the right type of care as quickly as possible. Find out more about what happens when you call 999.
Our team and resources
The East of England Ambulance Service is made up of over 5,000 members of staff and 1,200 volunteers.
We have three ambulance operations centres (AOCs) located in Bedford, Chelmsford and Norwich.
Our fleet is made up of:
- 485 frontline vehicles
- 72 rapid response vehicles
- 178 non-emergency ambulances (patient transport service and health care referral team) vehicles
- 53 hazardous area response team (HART), major incidents and resilience vehicles.