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StreetDoctors: A National Lottery funded charity empowering young people to save lives

12th August 2025

The national charity StreetDoctors works across 20 UK cities, with 26 teams and over 300 volunteers equipping young people with emergency first aid - and much more.

Young lifesavers become youthful community leaders with StreetDoctors. An inspirational blend backed by National Lottery players with two National Lottery Community Fund grants so far.

Lifesaving skills, lifelong impacts

StreetDoctors are empowering lots of young people. Over 13,000 in 2024. And 11,000 already by the end of July 2025.

Why young people? They are often present or first at the scene of an emergency on the streets. A young person reacting, helping in the right way can be the difference between life and death.

StreetDoctors empowers young people to gain the confidence and practical skills to act. The resilience to recover from trauma. And the leadership to train their peers, growing impacts across communities.

Fiona Bradshaw, Street Doctors (photograph by Street Doctors)
Fiona Bradshaw, Street Doctors (photograph by Street Doctors)

“The willingness to act”

Fiona Bradshaw,  Learning and Development Manager, StreetDoctors, explains how the young people are engaged by more than First Aid.

“Mostly we focus on what to do if someone's bleeding. Obviously, stabbings, things like that, are crazy. So, we teach young people what to do if they witness something like that on the street.”

How? “We keep it simplified. We focus on no equipment, just what’s practical for a young person. One of the things we want to improve with young people is their willingness to act. So, we co-design everything with the young people.”

Street Doctors Workshop (Claudia Leisinger Photography, 2022)
StreetDoctors Workshop (Claudia Leisinger Photography, 2022)

Insightful, informed, inclusive

StreetDoctors works with a range of young people: school-age and older, in different community or sport settings like boxing clubs, and people with different issues such as those involved in the justice system.

Scarlett Ash, Street Doctors (photograph by Street Doctors)
Scarlett Ash, StreetDoctors (photograph by Street Doctors)

Scarlett Ash,  Learning and Development Coordinator, StreetDoctors, summarises the charity’s approach: “We're not there to scare young people. Everything about the way we work is extremely trauma informed. We are just preparing them for what could happen, giving them confidence if they're ever in that situation.”

How? “We have honest conversations. We're exploring things like checking their prior knowledge around how the body works. Do they think there is a safe place to stab on the body? We use lots of different props.”

A medic pours cordial, representing blood, at a Street Doctors session in a boxing club. (Photograph by Street Doctors, 2023)
A medic pours cordial, representing blood, at a StreetDoctors session in a boxing club. (Photograph by StreetDoctors, 2023)

‘Near-to-peer’ trainers

In some cases, young medics in their early twenties are teaching and mentoring teenagers close to their age, or as Fiona says, “near to peer age.”

In all cases the young people are in safe, expert, hands.

“Our volunteers are trainee doctors, nurses, paramedics. Healthcare professionals that through our training programs are becoming healthcare leaders in their community.”

Some of the young medic volunteers. (WhatsApp image from Street Doctors, 2024)
Some of the young medic volunteers. (WhatsApp image from StreetDoctors, 2024)

The volunteers are vital to StreetDoctors training as Fiona highlights.

“There's something powerful in having trainee doctors, nurses, paramedics delivering this training. It gives young people a message that these people believe in them enough to be able to do these life-saving skills.”

Innovation is a strength of StreetDoctors. Fiona outlines how they are developing their work in 2025.

“What we're still working on is called the ‘Stepwise’ programme: sessions about bleeding, if someone’s knocked out, mental health. But we are developing a new programme: ‘Young Leaders.’ That idea is for young people to teach other young people what they've learned.”

A young medic volunteer engages young people at a Street Doctors session. (Photograph by Street Doctors)
A young medic volunteer engages young people at a StreetDoctors session. (Photograph by StreetDoctors)

Peer-to-peer training

“In Young Leaders, young people will develop the skills of the same standard as our medical volunteers. They’re mentored by medical volunteers, to talk about the medical side,” Fiona explains.

“And we ask the young people, ‘who do you think needs this knowledge?’ We can support them to go out and share knowledge. The impact of a 16-year-old hearing it from a 17-year-old who's doing it well and confidently – that impact could be mega.”

The elephant in the room: Knife crime

Scarlett joins the dots between today’s context and the StreetDoctors mission:

“The public is hearing about knife crime in the press. They know it affects young people. And people are like, ‘how can we solve this problem?’ A huge part of StreetDoctor's ethos is we are wanting young people to feel part of the solution.”

For sure, knife crime remains in the news. And National Lottery data reflects the trend. Big picture, billions have funded a huge range of good cause projects and services for young people thanks to people playing The National Lottery. Zooming into the topic of knife crime: in the first 15 years of National Lottery funding an average of one project per year cited knife crime as a key focus. In the 15 years since 2009, it’s an average of 19 such projects per year.

Martin Tilbury, CEO of Street Doctors, with two of the young medic volunteers. (Picture by Street Doctors, 2023)
Martin Tilbury, CEO of StreetDoctors, with two of the young medic volunteers. (Picture by StreetDoctors, 2023)

StreetDoctors on a mission

The knock-on effects from serious incidents like knife crime can be lasting.

“When we talk about violence reduction, it is not just a physical impact. It's also those emotional impacts," says Martin Tilbury, CEO of StreetDoctors. "How does it affect young people? Their lives, wellbeing.”

For Martin and his team, their mission is clear: “To empower young people to be part of a solution. Everything for us is about supporting those young people to be leaders in their community.”

In summing up, Martin emphasises how young people are the stars of StreetDoctors' developing story, spreading positive impacts across their communities.

“Lots of work we do is co-designed with young people, to be effective. We make sure their voice is heard.”

Watch the video below to hear, and read, the words of just a few of the young people engaged by StreetDoctors so far...