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Fred Pring died while ambulances queued outside Wrexham hospital | |
(35 minutes later) | |
While a man lay dying at home waiting for paramedics, an ambulance was outside a hospital for nearly fire hours dropping off a patient, an inquest has heard. | |
Despite a fully-staffed ambulance service, Fred Ping, 74, from Mynydd Isa, Flintshire, died 42 minutes after his wife had first called 999. | |
She had rung four times but there was not an ambulance available. | |
Mr Pring was categorised as a lower priority, the inquest in Ruthin heard. | |
He died in March 2013 at his home, had been receiving treatment for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. | |
On Friday, Gill Fleming, from the Welsh Ambulance Service, said on the day Mr Pring died there were seven ambulances and one rapid response vehicle to cover Flintshire and Wrexham. | |
But, she said, at the time of Mrs Pring's first call, there were no ambulances available. | But, she said, at the time of Mrs Pring's first call, there were no ambulances available. |
Coroner John Gittins asked: "Presumably the caller isn't told that? They're not told 'Sorry, we haven't got one available'?" | Coroner John Gittins asked: "Presumably the caller isn't told that? They're not told 'Sorry, we haven't got one available'?" |
Miss Fleming replied: "No." | Miss Fleming replied: "No." |
The court was told one ambulance had spent nearly five hours (287 minutes) waiting at Wrexham Maelor Hospital to drop off a patient. | |
Another ambulance had been at the same hospital for more than an hour and a half. | |
"In a nutshell, six vehicles waiting to transfer patients into Wrexham Maelor Hospital, three waiting to transfer patients into Glan Clwyd - all experiencing delays significantly beyond the 15 minute target handover," the coroner said. | |
'Red two' | |
Mr Pring's case had been classified by the ambulance service as 'red two', which is a lower priority than 'red one', which means an immediate threat to life. | |
Mr Gittins asked whether the call would be upgraded to a higher priority if there was a delay in sending an ambulance. | Mr Gittins asked whether the call would be upgraded to a higher priority if there was a delay in sending an ambulance. |
"No," Miss Fleming replied. | "No," Miss Fleming replied. |
Earlier a Home Office pathologist said it was extremely difficult to answer whether Mr Pring's life would have been saved if an ambulance had arrived sooner. | |
Dr Brian Rogers said the cause of death was heart disease and chronic lung disease. | |
He told the inquest his already compromised arteries struggled to cope with added pressure from weakened lungs. | |
'Too late' | |
"His heart had been failing, he had chest pain because his heart was struggling and his lungs weren't functioning properly," Dr Rogers said. | |
"Whether or not earlier intervention would have altered the outcome is impossible to say from the pathology evidence. It's possible it would, it's possible it wouldn't." | |
But Mr Pring's cardiologist told the hearing on Thursday if the ambulance had arrived after the first 999 he would have survived. | |
The consultant told the coroner he would have expected the ambulance to have arrived in six minutes. | The consultant told the coroner he would have expected the ambulance to have arrived in six minutes. |
Mr Pring's widow Joyce called 999 three times for an ambulance for her husband but was told the service was "very busy" in her area. | |
She called a fourth time to say they were "too late" and that her husband had passed away. |