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Ordnance Survey – Great Britain's national mapping agency
When an emergency call is made to an ambulance command and control centre, time is of the essence as life is at stake. Ambulance crews need to know exactly where they need to go and the quickest route there. They also need to know the quickest and least congested route to the nearest hospital with appropriate facilities.
Using definitive geographic data form Ordnance Survey, command and control teams can pinpoint a caller’s precise position while they are on the telephone, whether at a residential address or in the middle of open countryside. A detailed description can be relayed to attending crews, either via radio or displayed dynamically on in-vehicle screens. If an ambulance is fitted with GPS technology, command and control centres can track the emergency vehicle against its location in real time and keep the caller informed of its progress.
Ambulance services can associate their own data to Ordnance Survey datasets, providing them with an even richer information source. For example, while hospitals are featured on Ordnance Survey’s most detailed dataset, OS MasterMap, it is not possible to tell what type of hospitals they are. By integrating facility information with the OS MasterMap data, ambulance services can identify which establishments have, for example, A&E departments, maternity units and specialist coronary equipment.
OS MasterMap is designed to allow easy data sharing across and between organisations. Integrated civil contingency and disaster planning across all emergency services becomes possible when all parties have access to the same data or parallel datasets, as information can be exchanged and associated easily.
Find out more about OS MasterMap by viewing our product demonstration.
Interested in finding out more about how our data helps the emergency services? Read case studies of our data in action.

The benefits of geographic intelligence to ambulance services include: