By Rachael Venables - SKY News - 18/11/2024 - [Prevention] - [Awareness] As a single mum, Lucy* looked forward to her rare nights out. A few years ago, during after-work drinks at a local pub, she started feeling unwell. When she collapsed and passed out, a bouncer called an ambulance. Lucy's drink had been spiked.
The ambulance was crewed by two paramedics, a man and a woman. Still unconscious, Lucy was placed on a stretcher, strapped on to the bed, and driven towards the hospital.
After a scary episode, Lucy's friends must have breathed a sigh of relief. She was safe, and being looked after. But, as the female ambulance driver looked in her rear-view mirror to check on Lucy, she says she saw the unimaginable - her male colleague sexually assaulting his patient.
Lucy still doesn't remember what happened, but she has the police report and crime scene pictures of the inside of the ambulance.
Pointing to a photo of where she was strapped down, she says almost matter-of-factly: "He put my legs up, so my knees were up, and put his hand inside my groin area - possibly touching my vagina."
When she regained consciousness, she was told what had happened to her. Years later, she is still struggling to process it.
The paramedic denied the charges and was found not guilty at trial, but later struck off by the paramedics' regulator, the Health and Care Professions Council (HCPC).
They have a lower standard of proof than the criminal courts, and found against him, calling him a "serious threat to patient safety".
Lucy still wouldn't feel safe getting into an ambulance today. "It's awful, you feel so violated and vulnerable," she says. "It's a shock to think someone in that position would do that, when they're supposed to be there to look after you."
Her story is horrific, but Lucy is not alone. It forms part of a year-long Sky News investigation into sexual misconduct in the ambulance service, which has revealed a culture where abuse and harassment among staff are rife and patients are sexualised.
A senior ambulance boss admits the service has "let victims down", while stressing that perpetrators are the "minority".
Jason Killens, head of the Association of Ambulance Chief Executives (AACE) and Welsh Ambulance service says he expects "a steady increase" in the number of cases, with more paramedics being sacked for sexually inappropriate behaviour over the coming years across the UK, because of the work the AACE is doing to change the culture.
Data shared with Sky News shows one in five of the sexual misconduct complaints made against paramedics to their regulator, the Health and Care Professions Council, in 2023 were for acts against patients or members of the public.
While fewer than 1% of all HCPC members had concerns raised against them last year, in sexual misconduct cases, paramedics were hugely over-represented.
They make up just 11% of the HCPC register, but account for 64% of all investigations into sexual harassment against colleagues. The regulator's chair, Christine Elliott, thinks the sexual misconduct cases are "just the tip of the iceberg". If you have been affected by any of the issues raised in this article and were abused in state run medical and health facilities, you can contact Dignity4Patients, whose helpline is open Monday to Thursday 10am to 4pm.