A MAN died alone on Maryhill tenement stairs after waiting five hours for an ambulance.

The Scottish Ambulance Service has apologised to the family of Richard Brown, 55, and promised an investigation will be carried out.

A neighbour described the trauma of finding Richard dead despite making repeated calls to the ambulance service for help after he found him, The Daily Record reports. 

The pensioner, who does not wish to be named, said he called the ambulance several times last Saturday evening as he awaited the arrival of paramedics.

However, they arrived too late to save Richard’s life.

The neighbour told The Daily Record: “I was coming home from shopping when I saw him sitting on the stairs. He looked as if he was trying to go out but didn’t make it.

“He was making noises and trying to breathe but his breathing seemed laboured. I asked him a couple of times if he was okay but he didn’t reply.

“I went up to my house and phoned an ambulance. They said they would send one. I kept checking up on him to see if he was alright.

“He stays across from me but I didn’t know him very well, just to say hello to if we met in the lane.

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“The last time I went down was about five hours after I called the ambulance.

“I noticed his ears were white so I knew something was wrong. I went around and looked at his face and saw he wasn’t breathing. I went back upstairs and called the ambulance again.”

The neighbour was asked to start doing chest compressions but as he prepared to do so an ambulance crew finally arrived at Hathaway Lane.

He said: “They took over. They used some equipment to check for a pulse and pronounced him dead within minutes.

“It was obviously very upsetting. I knew there were problems with the ambulance service but I didn’t know it was as bad as that.

“I have been wondering what would have happened if the ambulance had turned up. They may have been able to save his life.

“It will take me a while to get over it. I think about it every time I come upstairs.”

A spokesman from the Scottish Ambulance Service said: “We would like to extend our sincere apologies and condolences to Mr Brown’s family at this extremely distressing time.

“We are very sorry for their loss. An investigation into the circumstances relating to the delay in reaching Mr Brown has been launched and all findings and lessons learned will be shared with Mr Brown’s family as part of this process.”

A Scottish Government spokesperson sent “sincere condolences to Mr Brown’s family, friends and neighbours”.

He added: “The ambulance service is rightly investigating all the details of this distressing incident and will share the findings and lessons with Mr Brown’s family.”