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The South East Coast Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust (SECAmb) is the NHS ambulance services trust for south-eastern England, covering Kent (including Medway), Surrey, West Sussex and East Sussex (including Brighton and Hove). It also covers a part of north-eastern Hampshire around Aldershot, Farnborough, Fleet and Yateley.
Each HART unit consist of emergency medical personnel, primarily paramedics, who have undergone specialised training at the National Ambulance Resilience Unit (NARU) Education Centre [5] in the use of safety critical procedures, skills, vehicles and equipment.
The South East Coast Ambulance Service is responsible for ambulance and paramedic services. [163] Crawley Hospital in West Green is operated by West Sussex Primary Care Trust. Some services are provided by the Surrey and Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust, including a 24-hour Urgent Treatment Centre for semi-life-threatening injuries. [164]
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It has 15 ‘Make Ready’ ambulance hubs where emergency vehicles are prepared, maintained and cleaned by specialist staff ready for the clinical staff to use for treating patients. The trust now responds to over one million emergency calls every year.
A new £1M control centre opened at The Horseshoe, Banstead on 11 January 1991. [5] In 1992, Surrey Ambulance Service was managed by East Surrey Health Authority as part of the National Health Service (NHS) and operated 17 ambulance stations. It served an area of around 700 sq mi (1,800 km 2) in Surrey and northeast Hampshire. [6]
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At Deptford, in order to transfer patients between the hospitals at Joyce Green and Long Reach near Gravesend, a horse-drawn ambulance tramway was constructed in 1897 and extended in 1904. In 1902, the MAB introduced a steam driven ambulance and in 1904, their first motor ambulance.