East of England Ambulance Service staff call for worker's death to be last
- Published
Friends of an ambulance worker who took his own life have called on colleagues to speak up and make his death the last.
Luke Wright was one of three members of the East of England Ambulance Service (EEAS) to die in 11 days last month.
More than 150 people paid their respects at the 24-year-old father's funeral near Watton in Norfolk.
The Ambulance Staff Charity (ASC) has taken 35 calls from EEAS workers seeking support, since May.
Friend Matthew Wilson said Mr Wright, a call handler who also volunteered as a community first responder, had "saved people's lives".
"He brought people back from the dead," he said. "He wanted to be a paramedic, and he loved the ambulance service - he loved helping people."
Suicide awareness ribbons were handed out at the service, and Mr Wilson called for others in need to speak up.
"Everyone needs to talk to get mental health out there, and talk about any issues that they have," he said.
"We want to make sure Luke's death is the final one that we have to suffer."
Following Mr Wright's death, and those of paramedics in Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire, EEAS said it would "always offer support" to staff in need.
The ACS was set up in 2015 to support paramedics, technicians and back-room staff.
Chief operating officer Karl Demian, said it had supported 1,000 people in the three years to October 2018 and 1,200 in the following 12 months.
He said the increase could be because of greater awareness but acknowledged paramedics' jobs, while always "fraught", were becoming "more complex".
"The nature of the incidents that they have to deal with has changed, but I think it's fair to say that the pressures on them are much greater than they were," he said.
Emergency calls in Norfolk were answered by colleagues in Essex and Bedfordshire as Norwich staff paid their respects.
- Published22 November 2019
- Published22 January 2018
- Published19 January 2018
- Published18 January 2018
- Published17 January 2018