Automation breakthrough reduces ambulance delays and saves NHS £800,000 a year

John E. Kaye
- Published
- News, Technology

Robotic automation is reducing ambulance waiting times by hundreds of hours each month and freeing NHS staff for frontline care, in a pilot expected to deliver more than £800,000 in annual savings
A digital automation system is helping to reduce ambulance waiting times and free up hospital staff across parts of the NHS, in what is projected to save the British health service more than £800,000 annually.
The technology, designed by M8 Solutions, a digital services consultancy based in North Staffordshire, England, uses Robotic Process Automation (RPA) to remove repetitive administrative tasks from emergency response systems.
By automatically processing key data that would otherwise require manual input, the system allows staff to focus on patient care and reduces the time taken to dispatch and coordinate ambulances.
Early data from the first UK health trust to adopt the system — which serves around 6.3 million people — indicates a monthly reduction of 230 hours in ambulance delays.
The savings are expected to grow as the technology is rolled out to other NHS trusts.
In a statement, an NHS clinical applications product manager involved in the project said: “The impact has been transformational.
“M8 Solutions has been instrumental in driving our strategy forward, bringing a wealth of experience, technical excellence, and an unwavering commitment to delivering results.”
The company has worked on a series of NHS digital transformation projects over the past year aimed at improving operational efficiency and patient experience.
Tracy Scriven, its founder and managing director, said: “This must happen accurately, and securely, as it directly affects patient care. We can say so far that our work is currently on course to cut NHS costs by £800,000 but as we expand the service, this saving is set to significantly rise.”
READ MORE: ‘Scientists are racing to protect sea coral with robots and AI as heatwaves devastate reefs’. An international symposium in Taiwan has unveiled how robots, AI and “super corals” are being deployed to fight unprecedented bleaching, with scientists warning that time is running out to save the world’s reefs.
Do you have news to share or expertise to contribute? The European welcomes insights from business leaders and sector specialists. Get in touch with our editorial team to find out more.
Main image: Anna Shvets/Pexels
Sign up to The European Newsletter
RECENT ARTICLES
-
AI found to make people 15% more likely to lie, study warns
-
Global aerospace composites market to triple by 2034 as demand for lighter, greener aircraft accelerates
-
ICIEC to host 15th AMAN Union Summit as Islamic finance eyes closer trade integration
-
Matching words and images helps charities raise more money, study finds
-
UK to host African Development Fund summit as Africa pushes for food self-sufficiency
-
Off the blocks: LEGO and Formula 1 reunite for documentary on viral Miami Grand Prix stunt
-
Mergers and partnerships drive Africa’s mining boom – but experts warn on long-term resilience
-
New AI breakthrough promises to end ‘drift’ that costs the world trillions
-
Europe tightens grip on strategic space data as dependence on U.S tech comes under scrutiny
-
Trinity Business School study warns conspiracy theories are fueling real-world protest and sabotage
-
GITEX GLOBAL 2025 to spotlight AI’s expanding role in future-critical sectors
-
UK organisations show rising net zero ambition despite financial pressures, new survey finds
-
HumanX to establish permanent European base with 2026 Amsterdam AI summit
-
Gulf ESG efforts fail to link profit with sustainability, study shows
-
Glastonbury and Coachella set the stage for $400bn music tourism growth
-
Geopolitical volatility enters global top ten business risks for first time, new survey finds
-
Redress and UN network call for fashion industry to meet sustainability goals
-
Dar Global unveils $1bn Trump Plaza Jeddah in second Saudi venture with Trump Organization
-
Investors eye UAE as Belt and Road real estate gateway for Asia
-
Mitsubishi Estate’s £800m South Bank scheme to deliver 4,000 jobs
-
Watch: driverless electric lorry makes history with world’s first border crossing
-
Bologna sets pace in Europe’s tech race with record investor–founder meetings
-
Family-owned firms resist board diversity gains despite gender quotas, study finds
-
UK start-up founders defy stereotypes with corporate roots and regional spread
-
London Law Expo 2025 to tackle leadership, AI and integrity in the legal sector