DISTURBING new figures have revealed how long potential heart attack and stroke victims in South Lakeland have to wait for an ambulance.
Emergency patients are waiting an average of 29 minutes and three seconds for an ambulance to arrive.
The figures show that the NHS target of 18 minutes for Category 2 ambulance calls, which covers urgent incidents like strokes and potential heart attacks, is being missed in South Lakeland.
Ambulance delays have also significantly worsened in recent years, with the average response time increasing by 44 per cent for Category 2 calls since 2019.
MP for Westmorland and Lonsdale, Tim Farron, is backing the Liberal Democrat's five-point plan to support local ambulance services, which would see a paramedic recruitment campaign and improvements in social care to reduce pressures on hospital beds.
Mr Farron said: "Behind these figures are devastating stories of pensioners left stranded for hours, or families in the South Lakes watching a loved one die before a paramedic could reach them.
"Paramedics on the frontline do an incredible job day in, day out, looking after people in their time of need.
"But our overstretched local NHS services are collapsing under the strain of years of neglect under this Conservative government.
"The Liberal Democrats have provided a clear plan to tackle these shocking delays and make sure ambulances reach people on time in an emergency.
"That means addressing workforce shortages, fixing the social care crisis, and ending the shortage of hospital beds, all of which are leaving patients in ambulances stuck outside A and E for hours."
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