HGV driver found to be over the limit after hitting ambulance

Dec 6, 2024 | News

SCAS is urging the public not to drink and drive as we enter the festive party season following an accident that took one of its ambulances out-of-service after it was hit by an HGV whose driver subsequently failed a breathalyzer test.

Around 5:45pm on Thursday, 5 December, we received an emergency 999 call with the caller reporting a collision between a car and a pedestrian at the junction of High Road and Parkville Road in Southampton, Hampshire. The pedestrian had sustained serious arm and shoulder injuries.

Whilst the ambulance crew were dealing with the patient, they reported that an HGV had clipped the ambulance as it tried to drive past. Officers from Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary, who were already on scene as a result of the first accident, asked the HGV driver to complete a breathalyzer test which he failed. He was then arrested for drunk driving.

Mark Ainsworth, executive director of operations at SCAS, said: “Fortunately neither of the ambulance crew, or anyone else at the scene, were injured as a result of the second collision but we did then have to send a second ambulance and a rapid response vehicle to the scene.”

“However, there was a delay in getting the injured pedestrian to hospital and this could have been catastrophic had they suffered more serious or life-threatening injuries. The accident has also taken an ambulance off the road at a time when our service, and the wider NHS, is under extreme pressure.”

“I would ask everyone this year to make a pledge not to drive any vehicle if they are under the influence of drink or drugs. Even the smallest amount of alcohol drunk or drugs used can affect your driving. It’s not worth the risk to you or other road users, so just don’t do it.”

Hampshire & Isle of Wight Constabulary is currently implementing Operation Holly – an annual campaign that runs from 1-31 December when officers in the Joint Operations Roads Policing Unit carry out targeted activity in order to stop drivers under the influence of drink and drugs. The force made more than 800 arrests during the campaign in 2023.

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