There are also a number of public and private patient transport operations in the UK, generally using
fixed wing aircraft, and which are part of a system of moving patients between points of care, or as part of a repatriation to the UK. SkyAngels Air Ambulance charity, flying out of Norwich International Airport [NWI], is a dedicated patient air transfer service with one helicopter and a number of fixed-winged aircraft under contracts to provide a service to the NHS. There is a
helicopter based patient transfer service, focused on paediatric cases, called the
Children's Air Ambulance, which first flew in 2012. The
Scottish Ambulance Service operates two fixed wing aircraft in this role, with patients flown to the mainland UK for treatment. In 2015, the
neonatal, paediatric and adult emergency care and retrieval operations were brought together with the Scottish Ambulance Service and utilise the aircraft and road ambulances for this purpose. They are co-located at the Scottish Ambulance Air Base at Glasgow International Airport. The
Isle of Man Department of Health and Social Care operates a fixed-wing air ambulance for patient transport between the island and mainland hospitals. The
Channel Islands of
Guernsey and
Jersey have a
Beechcraft King Air B200 air ambulance, operated by
Gama Aviation since July 2020, that transports patients to England for treatment that they cannot receive on the islands. In Jersey this is coordinated by the Jersey Emergency Transport Service (JETS). In addition,
Aurigny operate a
medical evacuation service from
Alderney to Guernsey. ==Notable accidents involving air ambulances==