Young Londoners are disproportionately affected by serious
violence, particularly knife crime. They are also more
likely to use the bus.
Catastrophic bleeding can result in death within minutes, and
immediate intervention is often the determining factor in
survival.
The London Assembly, working with the
London Youth Assembly has
today, agreed a motion calling on Transport for
London to work with the London Ambulance Service to install
publicly accessible bleed control kits in all major bus stations,
ensuring they are clearly signposted and unlocked for emergency
use.
It is also calling for training and awareness to be developed,
including first aid training for bus drivers and frontline staff,
to ensure confidence in responding to catastrophic bleeding
emergencies.
AM,
who proposed the motion, said:
“I want to thank the London Youth Assembly for bringing this
important issue forward and for their continued leadership on
keeping young Londoners safe.
“Bleed control kits can save lives, and we would like to
understand how they could work on London's bus
network.
“That is why we are calling on TfL to work with the London
Ambulance Service to trial them on selected routes and at major
bus stations."
AM, who seconded the
motion, said:
“The London Youth Assembly has done such vital work to
advocate for bleed kits in London to save lives and prevent
avoidable deaths from knife violence - and to that end, I wish to
thank them.
“Today's motion is about making London safer, especially
young Londoners, and to be able to support that is the sort of
work the Assembly should be doing.”
The full text of the motion is:
The Assembly welcomes and thanks the London Youth Assembly for
their strong advocacy in support of rolling out bleed kits on
buses across London.
The Assembly notes:
- That catastrophic bleeding can result in death within
minutes, and immediate intervention is often the determining
factor in survival.
- That community organisations, including the Daniel Baird
Foundation and the Caridon Foundation, have demonstrated the
life-saving impact of publicly accessible bleed control kits,
particularly in areas affected by violent crime.
- That London's buses and bus stations are vital public spaces
which transport millions of people daily.
- That young Londoners are more likely to use the bus and are
disproportionately affected by serious violence, particularly
knife crime.
The Assembly calls on Transport for London to work with the
London Ambulance Service to:
- Install publicly accessible bleed
control kits in all major bus stations, ensuring they are clearly
signposted and unlocked for emergency use.
- Pilot the installation of bleed
control kits on selected London bus routes, prioritising those
serving areas with higher levels of serious violence.
- Develop a training and awareness
offer, including first aid training for bus drivers and frontline
staff, to ensure confidence in responding to catastrophic
bleeding emergencies
- Publish a plan and timeline for a
broader roll-out should an evaluation of the pilot develop an
evidence base for this.
Notes to editors:
- The Motion was agreed unanimously.