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999: What's Your Emergency? returns for a new run, focusing on the relentless work carried out by Wiltshire's police, paramedic and fire services. Demand on Wiltshire's emergency services is at an all-time high and, as in so much of the UK, staff working in this once-traditional county are battling an ever-increasing range of thoroughly modern problems. Never before have Wiltshire's emergency services been so needed, nor so stretched.
In the UK the number of people with diagnoses of learning disabilities is at an all-time high, but with cuts to the care available, the police are being called on more for support. In the last decade, the number of people in the UK registered with learning disabilities has shot up by 90%, mainly driven by autism and its less extreme form, Asperger's.
This episode focuses on the five per cent of the UK's families who are collectively responsible for a staggering amount of the nation's crime: 50 per cent of criminal arrests. In these cases the 'tradition' of crime within a family means that police see extremes of criminality across a wide age range, costing the UK £9 billion a year. What are the prospects for breaking the cycle of crime passing from one generation to the next? 'A lot of our calls are the same families, brothers and sisters, mothers and sons, mothers and daughters, and you often think to yourself 'I wonder what it is now?' says Rachel Woodbridge. 'You know that when you hear a certain name, it's not going to be good.' Police are dispatched to apprehend a drunk young man outside a nightclub. Some members of his family have amassed 193 arrests and 111 convictions between them.
This episode focuses on the five per cent of the UK's families who are collectively responsible for a staggering amount of the nation's crime: 50 per cent of criminal arrests. In these cases the 'tradition' of crime within a family means that police see extremes of criminality across a wide age range, costing the UK £9 billion a year.
999: What's Your Emergency? returns for a new run, focusing on the relentless work carried out by Wiltshire's police, paramedic and fire services. Demand on Wiltshire's emergency services is at an all-time high and, as in so much of the UK, staff working in this once-traditional county are battling an ever-increasing range of thoroughly modern problems. Never before have Wiltshire's emergency services been so needed, nor so stretched.
The third season focuses on the work of police and paramedics in Cheshire who talk with honesty and wit about the challenges they face in modern Britain.
The second series of "999: What's Your Emergency?" focuses on the ambulance service. The series follows ambulance staff across the country, as paramedics and call handlers speak powerfully and frankly about the challenges they face and the Britain they see, while patients and their loved ones reveal the stories behind their calls for help.
The first season follows the members of the emergency services in Blackpool, Lancashire for six weeks in 2011. It follows members of the police service, the fire service and ambulance service as they work together to tackle crime and disorder in Blackpool.