South East Coast Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust is
 continuing to experience very high levels of demand today (1
 January 2017). The level of demand is affecting the service’s
 ability to respond to some calls and the public are asked to think
 carefully as to whether they need to call for an ambulance.
Life-threatening and serious calls are being prioritised and
 control centre staff and ambulance crews are working to get to
 those in the most need as quickly as possible. Patients in a
 non-life threatening condition are likely to wait longer than usual
 for an ambulance response and we would ask that they make
 alternative arrangements such dialling NHS 111 or seeking
 alternative advice so that we can focus on those who need us
 most.
Crews have so far responded to more than 1,300 incidents (up to
 1.30pm on 1 January) and yesterday (31 December) attended close to
 2,300 incidents up approximately 300 on last New Year’s Eve.
The Trust’s on call Gold Incident Commander, Richard Webber
 said: “We are receiving a very high volume of calls and are not
 reaching many of these as quickly as we would like. We are focusing
 our efforts on responding to calls which are deemed
 life-threatening.
“The public can help us by avoiding calling us for
 non-life-threatening emergencies and seeking alternative treatment
 from other healthcare providers or if they do require hospital
 treatment look to make their own way there.”
People are reminded to only dial 999 in the event of a serious
 emergency and remember the other options available, such as calling
 NHS 111, which we run in partnership across Kent, Surrey and Sussex
 with Care UK.
When to call 999:
If you think a patient is suffering from one of the following
 you must dial 999 for an ambulance:
 ·       heart attack (e.g. chest pain
 for more than 15 minutes)
 ·       sudden unexplained shortness
 of breath
 ·       heavy bleeding
 ·       unconsciousness (even if the
 patient has regained consciousness)
 ·       traumatic back/spinal/neck
 pain
You should also call for an ambulance if:
 ·       you think the patient’s
 illness or injury is life-threatening
 ·       you think the illness or
 injury may become worse, or even life-threatening on the way to the
 hospital
 ·       moving the patient/s without
 skilled people could cause further injury
 ·       the patient needs the skills
 or equipment of the ambulance service and its personnel