Ambulance bosses will be pressed at a meeting today about steps being taken to increase resources in Moray.
The service has been stretched in recent months with paramedics speaking out about “clueless management”.
A lack of resources has repeatedly been highlighted with crews travelling large distances and being unavailable for emergency calls due to patient transfers.
Today Moray MSP Richard Lochhead will meet Pauline Howie, chief executive of the Scottish Ambulance Service, to discuss action being taken.
He said: “There is no doubt that our hard working local ambulance personnel are often over stretched and this can also have implications for the public.
“I will therefore be pushing for additional resources for Moray’s ambulance provision.
“I’ve been given assurances that extra resources are now being deployed and I want to see evidence they are making a positive difference but even if they are there is still much more to be done.”
In the last year the ambulance service has funded a liaison officer at Dr Gray’s Hospital in Elgin to manage transfers between Aberdeen and Inverness.
A specialist technician and care assistant have also been set up to provide support.
However, concerns remain that the improvements are not enough to cope with demand.
Mr Lochhead added: “I’m aware that steps taken to date have done little to radically improve local ambulance provision. I’ll be urging the service to listen to the feedback of staff on the front line and to provide the extra resources they need.”