Air medics return to the screen


A DOCUMENTARY series following the work of the region’s air ambulance will return to screens on Monday, April 11.  The second series of Air Ambulance ER will broadcast at 9pm on Monday nights on Sky One.   The show features the work of the Great North Air Ambulance Service (GNAAS), which operates across the North-East, North Yorkshire and Cumbria.   Filming took place last summer at both the charity’s bases, at Durham Tees Valley Airport near Darlington and at Langwathby, near Penrith.   The first episode features the rescue of a tree surgeon from the banks of Windermere and a young man struck by a car in Eaglescliffe, near Stockton-on-Tees.  Rescues featured on the remaining five episodes include:  A motorcyclist given a blood transfusion in the back of the helicopter in Spennymoor, County Durham  A man kicked in the stomach by a horse near Coniston  The team encounter an angry bull while treating a farmer in Blackford, Carlisle   Mandy Drake, head of fundraising at GNAAS, said: “We got so much positive feedback from the last series. Above all it’s just a chance to show what we do.

A DOCUMENTARY series following the work of the region’s air ambulance will return to screens on Monday, April 11. 

The second series of Air Ambulance ER will broadcast at 9pm on Monday nights on Sky One.  

The show features the work of the Great North Air Ambulance Service (GNAAS), which operates across the North-East, North Yorkshire and Cumbria 

Filming took place last summer at both the charity’s bases, at Durham Tees Valley Airport near Darlington and at Langwathby, near Penrith 

The first episode features the rescue of a tree surgeon from the banks of Windermere and a young man struck by a car in Eaglescliffe, near Stockton-on-Tees. 

Rescues featured on the remaining five episodes include: 

  • A motorcyclist given a blood transfusion in the back of the helicopter in Spennymoor, County Durham 
  • A man kicked in the stomach by a horse near Coniston 
  • The team encounter an angry bull while treating a farmer in Blackford, Carlisle

 

Mandy Drake, head of fundraising at GNAAS, said: “We got so much positive feedback from the last seriesAbove all it’s just a chance to show what we do. The helicopter is obviously a life-saving piece of machinery but it’s the expertise of the crew on board who make the difference day-in-day-out. We can’t wait to see the new episodes and hope the public enjoy them as well.” 

Angela Smith, production executive for Tern Television, the makers of the series, said: “It’s been a real privilege working with the Great North Air Ambulance Service again. We are really proud of the finished series and are looking forward to everyone seeing it.” 

GNAAS is entirely dependent on donations to survive as it does not receive funding from the government. Last year it flew 818 missions across the region, including the rescues of 59 children

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