The paramedic, who did not want to be named, said the photo taken on Monday afternoon included multiple types of ambulance crews and a CareFlight vehicle. They said unless there was a major accident, the number of vehicles at the emergency department was ludicrous. No major incidents were reported on Monday. MORE TOP NEWSNew data shows how long Territorians are likely to live based on their suburbSchool fight horror: Year 8 boy knocked out by older studentNT’s economy set for ‘steady recovery’ Moody’s analysis shows but budget repair ‘unachievable’They added paramedics were more frequently attending to alcohol-fuelled jobs. “This is becoming very consistent. It’s happening more and more,” they said. “Everyone’s sick of being flogged … Things have to be sorted at ground level around alcohol- fuelled, anti-social behaviour and dysfunction, and we need more resources.” An NT Health spokeswoman said numbers had “slightly increased” in patients being brought to the emergency department by ambulance. “Royal Darwin Hospital did experience a peak in bed demand earlier this week,” she said. HOT NEW DEAL: Read everything for 28 days for just $1“It is our normal procedure to review and analyse data trends. Analysis is currently underway to understand why there was a surge in patient acute bed demand.” St John NT ambulance services director Andrew Thomas said while the organisation had an increased workload in December and January, transport of patients to emergency departments in Darwin and Palmerston combined was stable at 1600 per month combined. [email protected] follow Raphaella Saroukos
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