A Waikato mother who dialled 111 when her 4-day-old baby couldn't breathe properly says she is lucky the incident wasn't "life or death" as concerns about single-crew ambulances increase.
Roseanne Underwood-Cadman and husband Simon Cadman's new baby, Maia, was less than 100 hours old when they called emergency services to their home in the middle of the night.
With Maia struggling to breathe properly, the couple asked for an ambulance to rush to their Ohaupo home. But when the ambulance arrived and the single crew member confirmed Maia needed hospital attention, they all had to wait for another ambulance to be ordered before there were enough staff to handle the emergency.
In the 10 minutes it took for the second emergency crew to arrive, Mrs Underwood-Cadman says the scenario could have had tragic consequences - and single-crew ambulances were not fair for patients, families or the paramedics trying to do their job.
"We were lucky it didn't turn out to be a life-and-death situation," she said. "It was a pressurised situation to have a 4-day-old baby with a breathing problem and a paramedic saying she needed to go to hospital - but they weren't able to do that.