Officials in Novosibirsk region say callers to the 103 emergency line now experience significantly shorter waiting times after the region merged its ambulance dispatch centres. The regional government reported a fourfold reduction in the time it takes for an operator to answer a call following the integration.
Novosibirsk ambulance dispatchers cut call wait times
According to a statement from the regional government press office, the Territorial Centre for Disaster Medicine has been integrated into the single dispatch system. As a result, any available operator can answer calls from any settlement across the region and forward requests to the appropriate district for execution.
“This has made the 103 line far more accessible. As a result, the waiting time to reach an operator has dropped drastically – we are seeing a fourfold reduction in the time it takes for the dispatcher to pick up the phone,” said Alexander Balabushyevich, chief physician at the regional ambulance service.
Balabushyevich emphasised that the integration concerns call handling rather than vehicle redeployment. “A call is automatically routed to any free dispatcher in another district, taken and then assigned to the relevant local unit for response. That does not mean an ambulance from the Northern district will travel to Novosibirsk or vice versa. The nearest available crew will attend the call,” he said.
The authorities did not provide figures on whether ambulance travel times or on-scene arrival times have changed as a result of the merger. The reported improvement therefore applies specifically to the speed of initial operator response rather than to overall emergency response times.
Officials also reported that the ambulance service operated in its normal mode throughout the holiday period. The total number of calls did not increase, and the pattern of complaints was similar to regular weekdays. The most common reasons for callers seeking assistance were elevated blood pressure, minor injuries and headaches.
Experts and officials say faster operator response can reduce anxiety for callers and improve the speed of triage and dispatch decisions. Shorter wait times on the line help ensure patients receive timely instructions and prioritise resources appropriately.
Nonetheless, emergency-response analysts note that measuring the success of such reforms requires tracking downstream metrics, including ambulance dispatch intervals, travel times, on-scene care and patient outcomes. The regional government’s current update focuses on the immediate improvement in call-answer times, while further performance data may be released as the integrated system matures.
For residents, the most tangible change is the reduced delay before speaking to an operator. For service managers, the integration offers more flexibility in managing workload across districts and in balancing operator availability during peak periods or staff shortages.
Officials said they will continue to monitor the system and assess whether additional adjustments are needed to improve overall emergency response across the Novosibirsk region.
Key Takeaways:
- Novosibirsk ambulance dispatchers now answer calls to the 103 emergency line four times faster after dispatch centres were merged.
- The Territorial Centre for Disaster Medicine joined the unified system so any operator can take calls from any locality and route them to the appropriate district.
- Authorities say ambulances continue to be sent from the nearest available brigade; no data yet on ambulance arrival times.
- Service operated normally during the holidays with common complaints including high blood pressure, minor injuries and headaches.

















