Sunday, March 04, 2007

New air ambulance quickly in action in West Somerset

THE new Dorset and Somerset Air Ambulance helicopter went into service on Thursday, March 1, and almost immediately flew on a mission in West Somerset.
The air ambulance was called to Minehead when an elderly woman was taken ill during the afternoon.
It was only the crew’s third mission in the new Eurocopter EC 135 aircraft, which offers a quicker, quieter, and smoother flight than the Bolkow 105dbs it has replaced.
The distinctive yellow colour helicopter landed on the Minehead Town Football Club pitch off Irnham Road ready to airlift the patient.
Unfortunately, the woman was understood to have died before she could be flown to hospital.
The Dorset and Somerset Air Ambulance service has been operating since 2000 and has helped to save hundreds of lives, receiving on average three to four calls a day.
It has taken the air ambulance trust two years of fund-raising to upgrade to the new generation of aircraft.
The helicopter costs more than £3,500 a day to run and is funded entirely by charitable donations.
The new aircraft was officially launched by the Princess Royal at The Fleet Air Arm Museum, RNAS Yeovilton.
It has moved from its previous base in Henstridge, between Sherborne and Shaftesbury, to a new home at AgustaWestland’s Yeovil airfield, which provides improved facilities for the aircraft and crew and should help it to more quickly reach the scene of an emergency.
  • Photo by Mark the Photographer, ref M010015. Order image reprints online at www.tcpbymtp.co.uk.

No comments: