Early development (2003–2004) Efforts to create a coordinated EMS system began in 2003 through collaboration among government agencies, the National Hospital of Sri Lanka, and SweRoad, a Swedish National Road Administration company. Prior to this, ambulance operations were managed independently by private hospitals, the Sri Lanka Red Cross Society, and St. John Ambulance without central coordination. The
Colombo Municipal Council acquired ambulances and trained firefighters as EMTs, introducing the three-digit emergency number
1-1-0 in November 2004. This pilot was interrupted by the
December 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, which caused over 30,000 deaths.
Post-tsunami reconstruction (2005–2009) Following the tsunami, the Ministry of Healthcare and Nutrition established a
Pre-Hospital Care Committee under its Trauma Secretariat to guide EMS development. In 2005, support from Johanniter International of Germany enabled renewed operations using the 1-1-0 number. Medical Teams International (MTI), a U.S. humanitarian organization, entered Sri Lanka in 2005 to assist with prehospital system design and EMT training. Between 2005 and 2010, MTI trained approximately 2,700 EMTs in nine districts and developed standardized protocols in partnership with the Ministry of Health. During this period, MTI's Director Donnie Woodyard, Jr. served on the Ministry of Health Trauma Secretariat as an EMS Policy Advisor and oversaw development of the first EMT textbook in the Sinhala and Tamil languages. In parallel with these efforts, the Government of the Netherlands supported a large-scale EMS infrastructure project through its Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ Development-Related Export Transactions (ORET) program. In 2007, the Dutch company SAR Systems and the International Centre for Emergency Techniques (ICET) delivered 115 ambulances and fire engines to Sri Lanka, along with training and maintenance support. The project included the donation of emergency equipment, the establishment of a firefighter and rescue training center, and capacity-building initiatives across multiple districts.
Regional development: the Jaffna system In Jaffna District, local health authorities developed a nighttime ambulance service during the final years of the
Sri Lankan civil conflict. With curfew restrictions preventing civilian travel after 6 p.m., the Regional Department of Health Services (RDHS) partnered with St. John Ambulance and the Red Cross to operate emergency vehicles during curfew hours. The model expanded into a 24-hour system, coordinated by Medical Teams International, with EMT training by MTI. The system was officially inaugurated on February 11, 2009, with U.S. support. By the end of its first year, the Jaffna system had responded to over 2,000 ambulance calls, trained nearly 600 EMTs, and achieved operational self-sufficiency with minimal subsidy. In 2012, Danish emergency services company
Falck A/S acquired a major stake in Med1 and launched expanded operations in 2013. Falck Sri Lanka operated a fleet of modern ambulances, motorcycle EMTs provided quick response, and leased helicopters for medical helicopter response nationwide. Although successful in urban response times, Falck discontinued Sri Lankan operations in 2015.
1990 Suwa Seriya ambulance service (2016–present) The current national ambulance service,
Suwa Seriya (literally "Good Health"), accessible by dialing
1990, began in 2016 with funding from the Government of India and technical guidance from GVK-EMRI, which operates India’s 108 service. The initial US$7.6 million grant supplied 88 fully equipped ambulances and training for EMTs and dispatchers.
Suwa Seriya absorbed much of the trained workforce, dispatch systems, technology, and educational materials previously developed by Medical Teams International and by
Falck Sri Lanka, creating continuity between earlier pilot systems and the new national framework. Operated as a government-owned foundation, the service rapidly expanded to nationwide coverage and was formalized under an Act of Parliament in 2018. By 2023,
Suwa Seriya had answered more than 1.8 million calls with an average response time of 12 minutes. During the COVID-19 pandemic, it transported over 175,000 patients. Its command centers employ real-time GPS tracking, algorithmic dispatching, and integrated analytics to optimize national coverage.
Digital innovation and connected ambulances (2023–present) In late 2023,
Suwa Seriya launched a "Connected Ambulance" project incorporating artificial intelligence and augmented reality to enhance prehospital care. Developed in partnership with Singapore-based
Mediwave (the digital health division of Wavenet), the initiative introduced head-mounted mixed-reality displays for EMTs, allowing remote physician consultation, live access to patient health records, and automated ePCR documentation. Annual reports of the 1990
Suwa Seriya Foundation describe the Connected Ambulance as a milestone in Sri Lanka's digital transformation, supported by private donors and the "Adopt an Ambulance" fundraising program that raised LKR 750 million. == Emergency access numbers ==