Skip navigation
North West Ambulance Service (NWAS) logo
  • News
  • Events
  • Charity
  • Ambulance Academy
  • Publications
Use this link to enable the ReciteMe accessibility toolkit Enable ReciteMe accessibility tools
  • Home
  • Our service
    • Urgent and emergency care (999)
    • NHS 111 (non-emergency)
    • Patient Transport Service (PTS)
    • Major incidents
    • Emergency advice
    • Information for professionals
    • Other ways we can help
    • Help accessing our services
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?
  • Get involved
    • Your Call Magazine
    • Volunteer with us
    • Support the North West Ambulance Charity
    • Support our campaigns
    • Children and young people
    • Lifesaving skills
    • Events
    • Share your experience
    • What happens with your feedback?
    • Talk to us on social media
    • Change NHS: Helping shape a health service fit for the future
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?
  • About us
    • Our publications
    • Who we are
    • Our locations
    • Our strategy and values
    • How we are doing
    • Board of directors
    • Equality, diversity and inclusion
    • Research and development
    • Public Health
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?
  • Careers
    • Our assessment centre
    • Current vacancies
    • Join our team
    • Why work with us
    • Explore roles
    • Applying for a job
    • Working with the Armed Forces
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?
  • Contact us
    • Media
    • Request my information
    • FOI and EIR
    • General enquiries
    • Lost property
    • Make a complaint
    • External Patient Event Reporting Form
    • Point taken
    • Send a thank you
    • Tell us how we did
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?
  • Home
  • Our service
    • Urgent and emergency care (999)
    • NHS 111 (non-emergency)
    • Patient Transport Service (PTS)
    • Major incidents
    • Emergency advice
    • Information for professionals
    • Other ways we can help
    • Help accessing our services
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?
  • Get involved
    • Your Call Magazine
    • Volunteer with us
    • Support the North West Ambulance Charity
    • Support our campaigns
    • Children and young people
    • Lifesaving skills
    • Events
    • Share your experience
    • What happens with your feedback?
    • Talk to us on social media
    • Change NHS: Helping shape a health service fit for the future
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?
  • About us
    • Our publications
    • Who we are
    • Our locations
    • Our strategy and values
    • How we are doing
    • Board of directors
    • Equality, diversity and inclusion
    • Research and development
    • Public Health
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?
  • Careers
    • Our assessment centre
    • Current vacancies
    • Join our team
    • Why work with us
    • Explore roles
    • Applying for a job
    • Working with the Armed Forces
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?
  • Contact us
    • Media
    • Request my information
    • FOI and EIR
    • General enquiries
    • Lost property
    • Make a complaint
    • External Patient Event Reporting Form
    • Point taken
    • Send a thank you
    • Tell us how we did
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?

Search the site

  • Home
    • Urgent and emergency care (999)
    • NHS 111 (non-emergency)
    • Patient Transport Service (PTS)
    • Major incidents
    • Emergency advice
    • Information for professionals
    • Other ways we can help
    • Help accessing our services
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?
    • Your Call Magazine
    • Volunteer with us
    • Support the North West Ambulance Charity
    • Support our campaigns
    • Children and young people
    • Lifesaving skills
    • Events
    • Share your experience
    • What happens with your feedback?
    • Talk to us on social media
    • Change NHS: Helping shape a health service fit for the future
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?
    • Our publications
    • Who we are
    • Our locations
    • Our strategy and values
    • How we are doing
    • Board of directors
    • Equality, diversity and inclusion
    • Research and development
    • Public Health
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?
    • Our assessment centre
    • Current vacancies
    • Join our team
    • Why work with us
    • Explore roles
    • Applying for a job
    • Working with the Armed Forces
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?
    • Media
    • Request my information
    • FOI and EIR
    • General enquiries
    • Lost property
    • Make a complaint
    • External Patient Event Reporting Form
    • Point taken
    • Send a thank you
    • Tell us how we did
    Need to arrange transport using our Patient Transport Service (PTS)?
  • News
  • Events
  • Charity
  • Ambulance Academy
  • Publications
Home > News > Announcements > Paramedic Paul Smith recognised in King’s Birthday Honours List

Paramedic Paul Smith recognised in King’s Birthday Honours List

Posted 13th June 2025

Senior Paramedic Team Leader Paul Smith has been awarded a British Empire Medal (BEM) for his services to the community in Merseyside in the 2025 King’s Birthday Honours List.

Share this page
Head and shoulder image of Senior Paramedic Team Leader Paul Smith

Paul has been formally and nationally recognised as the first responder at last year’s devastating and tragic incident in Southport, showing extraordinary courage and professionalism.

On 29 July 2024, Paul was the first emergency responder to arrive at Hart Street, where multiple children and adults had sustained life-threatening injuries following a horrific stabbing attack.

Despite being informed that the violent attack was still ongoing, Paul prioritised the needs of the injured over his own safety. He wasted no time waiting for the area to be declared safe and immediately began assessing the situation and triaging patients.

In the early moments of a horrific mass casualty event, the first clinician on scene plays a pivotal role in shaping the response. Paul’s quick situational assessment and clinical leadership under extreme pressure helped coordinate the arrival and actions of subsequent emergency crews, ensuring that vital treatment began as quickly as possible.

For any paramedic, even though they may be used to dealing with injured patients, to see a patient and have to move away to triage the next patient is an incredibly difficult thing to do, especially if those patients are children. To do so, in accordance with protocol is risking a moral injury to that paramedic and can result in post-traumatic mental health symptoms or conditions.

Chief Executive Salman Desai praised Paul’s actions, stating: “Until further ambulance resources arrived Paul was alone and witnessed very distressing injuries and images. All ambulance staff are trained to deal with a mass casualty situation. However, all staff fervently hope that they never have to attend one, and certainly not as the first on scene. Thankfully, incidents of this type are rare.

“Paul’s early arrival on scene, with the minimum of delay, likely had a major influence which should not be underestimated.

“In the face of what could have been a career-ending experience, Paul resumed his role as a Team Leader. Over the following hours, days, weeks and months, Paul has been a source of support for his team while they have accessed help to come to terms with what they saw that day.

“Paul is a credit to the ambulance service and worthy of this national recognition.”

Well done and thank you to Paul and all our staff, as well as our partner emergency service staff, who attended this incident. Our thoughts remain with the families of Bebe, Elsie and Alice.

Archive

  • 2025
  • 2024

Contact us

General enquiries

0345 112 0999 To call general enquiries, click this link or dial 0345 112 0999

This number should NOT be used to contact us in an emergency. In an emergency dial 999 immediately or for non-urgent medical advice call NHS 111.

How to find us

Directions to our offices

Alternative formats

Please contact us if you require any information on our website in an alternative format, such as easy read of large print.

CQC Good rating widget

  • Help
  • Privacy policy
  • Accessibility
  • Freedom of Information
  • Contact us
  • Green Room
  • Cookies

© Copyright 2025 North West Ambulance Service NHS Trust. Lovingly crafted by Mixd

Cookie settings

We use some essential cookies to make this website work. We’d like to set additional cookies to understand how you use nwas.nhs.uk, remember your settings and improve our services. We also use cookies set by other sites to help us deliver content from their services.
View cookies
You have accepted additional cookies. You can change your cookie settings at any time.
You have rejected additional cookies. You can change your cookie settings at any time.