NWAS | |
Non-Profit NHS Branch-Off | |
Genre | Medical, Ambulance Service |
Founded | 01/06/2006 |
Headquarters | North-West England |
Area served
|
North-West England |
Services | Free (With Required National Insurance) Ambulance |
Owner | [UK] Government |
Website | Organisation Official Website |
The North West Ambulance Service NHS Trust (NWAS), formerly 4 services, (Cumbria Ambulance Service, Lancashire Ambulance Service, Cheshire and Mersey Ambulance Service and Greater Manchester Ambulance Service) was formed on 1 July 2006, as part of Health Minister Lord Warner's plans to reduce the number of NHS ambulance service trusts operating in the United Kingdom meaning that (NWAS) was given a bigger area to cover, making them the second largest in England
It is one of 10 Ambulance Trusts providing England with Emergency medical services, and is part of the National Health Service, receiving direct government funding for its role. There is no charge to patients for use of the service, and under the Patient's charter, every person in the United Kingdom has the right to the attendance of an ambulance in an emergency.
Based in Bolton, the new Trust provided services to almost 7 million people in Greater Manchester, Cheshire, Merseyside, Lancashire, Cumbria,and the North Western fringes of the High Peak district of Derbyshire (covering the towns of Glossop and Hadfield) in an area of some 5,500 square miles (14,000 km2). The trust lost the contract for non-emergency patient transport services in Cheshire, Warrington and Wirral. It will transfer to the West Midlands Ambulance Service in July 2016.
They also operate the largest fleet of non-emergency patient transport ambulances in the UK, in 2013/2014 NWAS patient transport service ambulances transported 1.2 million people to hospital appointments across the region.