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Areas of Tayside and Fife where ambulances need police escort

Patients from Stonehaven and south Aberdeenshire may end up at Ninewells Hospital in Dundee. Image: Kim Cessford/DC Thomson.

Scores of addresses across Tayside and Fife have become no-go areas for paramedics, new analysis has found.

Official figures from the Scottish Ambulance Service reveals 446 homes across the country are currently “red-flagged”.

These are addresses where crews will not attend without a further risk assessment of the property or being escorted by police.

Where are these addresses?

The service confirmed 18 of these homes are in Dundee or Angus, with a further 11 recorded against Perth postcodes.

A total of 22 were listed for Fife addresses.

An ambulance worker. Image: PA.

The full extent of the shocking conditions facing ambulance workers has been revealed just days after officials confirmed there were at least 308 physical and verbal assaults on staff last year.

‘Shocking’ that ambulances need police escort

But a North East MSP has raised further concerns over how a staffing crisis within Police Scotland could leave ambulance workers facing an impossible choice.

Tess White questioned whether the government is doing enough after 1,000 frontline officers quit the force over a 10-month period last year.

Tess White MSP. Image: Kami Thomson/DC Thomson.

She said: “Paramedics dedicate themselves to helping others and should never fear for their own safety.

“So it’s shocking to see so many addresses in Tayside where they can’t enter without a police escort.

“We know that physical and verbal abuse is rife because the Scottish Ambulance Service highlighted it just last week.”

How do the figures compare to previous years?

Ms White questioned whether police and ambulance services could struggle to link up during a dual staffing crisis and vowed to investigate whether there had been any change to protective arrangements for this reason.

The latest figures from the Scottish Ambulance Service represent a significant drop from the 2,557 red flag addresses held in 2018.

Health Secretary Humza Yousaf. Image: PA.

But a spokeswoman for the service confirmed this change is because “the process for reviewing the warnings has improved and thus lowered the number of active warnings”.

She said: “Our staff should not fear for their safety when working, and these measures have been put in place to help protect them while they do their job.

“Individual addresses where staff have previously faced violence or threatening behaviour are automatically flagged to our crews, who can then request additional support, if they believe it is required.”

The spokeswoman continued: “Our staff are trained in assessing risk and managing aggression so that they can make a sensible decision based on the circumstances.

“However, getting to the sickest patients is always our priority, regardless of whether the police are in attendance.”