Indian Assistance 1990 Ambulance Service to be Expanded Countrywide

The emergency ambulance service was set up with the $ 7 million assistance from the Indian Government in July 2016. The first phase of the project included the establishment of an emergency response centre, the deployment of 88 ambulances in the Southern and Western provinces and the recruitment and training of nearly 600 Sri Lankan personnel to implement the project. The “1990” free ambulance service currently implemented in the Western and Southern provinces has been a success and the Government plans to implement the service in the other seven provinces with the financial assistance of India, Deputy Minister Dr. Harsha de Silva revealed.
He said the Government was finalising arrangements to set up an institution named the Suwasariya Foundation by an Act of Parliament in order to expand the 1990 ambulance service island wide. The Cabinet of Ministers earlier this month gave the nod to the Government to set up the Suwasariya Foundation by an Act of Parliament in order to expand the 1990 ambulance service island wide. India has granted another $ 15 million to expand the free ambulance service for this purpose and the 1,300 new staff members will be recruited across the island in the next phase. We are now in the final phase of the Act of Parliament to incorporate the 1990 Foundation which will be fully-owned by the Government of Sri Lanka and run as an independent entity. The current response time from the time of a call is less than 13 minutes and 99.6% of calls are answered in the first ring. Since implementation, over 40,000 emergency patients have been transferred to hospitals.
Further the Deputy Minister said, the 1990 Suwasariya Command and Control Center in Rajagiriya, with a staff of over 500 staff including Emergency Medical Technicians, Pilots and Emergency Response Officers, is perhaps one of the most efficient operations in Sri Lanka