This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/scotland/south_of_scotland/6315589.stm

The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
Concern over ambulance responses Concern over ambulance responses
(about 5 hours later)
The Scottish Ambulance Service has been accused of putting lives at risk by taking too long to respond to calls.The Scottish Ambulance Service has been accused of putting lives at risk by taking too long to respond to calls.
Agnes Alexander, a 77-year-old woman from Eyemouth in the Borders, is thought to have suffered a stroke after waiting more than three hours for help.Agnes Alexander, a 77-year-old woman from Eyemouth in the Borders, is thought to have suffered a stroke after waiting more than three hours for help.
A Scottish Ambulance Service spokesman said the first call was non-emergency but admitted the ambulance had taken longer than an hour to arrive.A Scottish Ambulance Service spokesman said the first call was non-emergency but admitted the ambulance had taken longer than an hour to arrive.
He said: "We have written in detail to the family and have apologised."He said: "We have written in detail to the family and have apologised."
Mrs Alexander's husband Andrew said he called NHS 24 after she fell ill last November.Mrs Alexander's husband Andrew said he called NHS 24 after she fell ill last November.
Frontline crews have been contacting me raising concerns that Borders ambulance crews are being dispatched to Edinburgh to cover shortages in the city Christine GrahameMSP It was horrendous, I didn't have time to think about anything except keeping my wife alive Andrew Alexander
He claimed a nurse arrived two hours after his call and called a non-emergency ambulance.He claimed a nurse arrived two hours after his call and called a non-emergency ambulance.
But Mr Alexander said she left before it arrived and as the pensioner's condition deteriorated her husband called 999 twice.But Mr Alexander said she left before it arrived and as the pensioner's condition deteriorated her husband called 999 twice.
The family claimed an ambulance eventually arrived more than six hours after Mr Alexander called NHS 24 and more than three and a half hours after an emergency ambulance was called.The family claimed an ambulance eventually arrived more than six hours after Mr Alexander called NHS 24 and more than three and a half hours after an emergency ambulance was called.
He told BBC Radio's Good Morning Scotland programme: "The nurse had just left and my wife's condition deteriorated, she was violently sick - it was horrendous, I didn't have time to think about anything except keeping my wife alive and it was roughly about 4 o'clock in the morning before an ambulance arrived."
Christine Grahame, a Scottish National Party MSP for the area, said it was an increasingly common occurrence and has asked the ambulance service for a full explanation.Christine Grahame, a Scottish National Party MSP for the area, said it was an increasingly common occurrence and has asked the ambulance service for a full explanation.
Serious questionsSerious questions
"For some time frontline crews have been contacting me raising concerns that Borders ambulance crews are being dispatched to Edinburgh to cover shortages in the city and that recent changes to rest periods for crews were leading to reduced cover in the region," she said."For some time frontline crews have been contacting me raising concerns that Borders ambulance crews are being dispatched to Edinburgh to cover shortages in the city and that recent changes to rest periods for crews were leading to reduced cover in the region," she said.
"The experience which my constituents have faced demonstrates to me that current management of the ambulance service in the Scottish Borders is placing people at risk."The experience which my constituents have faced demonstrates to me that current management of the ambulance service in the Scottish Borders is placing people at risk.
"The notion that it can take as much as three and a half hours for an ambulance to arrive after an emergency call has been placed (and six hours after the first call was made by Mr Alexander) will frighten and horrify many Borderers.""The notion that it can take as much as three and a half hours for an ambulance to arrive after an emergency call has been placed (and six hours after the first call was made by Mr Alexander) will frighten and horrify many Borderers."
Ms Grahame said the Scottish Ambulance Service management had conceded an error was made in allocating a nearby ambulance crew which had become available after finishing their rest period.Ms Grahame said the Scottish Ambulance Service management had conceded an error was made in allocating a nearby ambulance crew which had become available after finishing their rest period.
However, she said there remained serious questions about why it took so long for the emergency ambulance to arrive. However, she said there remained serious questions about why it took so long for the emergency ambulance to arrive, the number of crews in the Borders and how they are deployed.
Mrs Alexander is understood to be recovering from her illness.Mrs Alexander is understood to be recovering from her illness.