Close to 2000 people with “emergency” conditions, such as suspected strokes or heart attacks, had to wait for more than three hours for an ambulance in December 2022.

The average response time for so-called ‘Category 2 ambulance calls’ across the North East was a staggering 1:36:23, while one in ten patients in this category waited for 3:39:26 or longer.

Category 2 is for “emergency calls”, for conditions such as heart attacks and strokes.

The response time is more than 12 times the NHS target of 18 minutes.

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Waiting times for “urgent” cases, for conditions such as late stages of labour, non-severe burns, and diabetic attacks, also reached record highs in December.

The average response time for Category 3 ambulance calls across England was 4 hours and 18 minutes, while 8,700 patients with such conditions waited more than 11 hours.

At Prime Minister’s Questions, Keir Starmer MP, Leader of the Labour Party, raised the case of Stephanie, a 26-year-old cancer patient from Plymouth who died while waiting for an ambulance only 2.3 miles from a hospital on January 4.

The Labour leader called on the Prime Minister to apologise for “the lethal chaos he is presiding over.”

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Wes Streeting MP, Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care said: “Patients can no longer rely on the NHS being there for them in an emergency. Heart attack and stroke victims are left waiting hours for an ambulance, when every second counts.

“That is the terrifying reality after 13 years of Conservative mismanagement of the health service.

“Labour will provide the biggest expansion of NHS staff in history to treat patients on time again, and reform the health service to make it fit for the future. We will train 7,500 more doctors and 10,000 more nurses and midwives every year, paid for by abolishing the non-dom tax status. Patients need doctors and nurses more than the wealthiest need a tax break.”

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