Quote:£3.50 a day times 365 = £1277.50. Factor in a little under occupancy and we arrive at £1,000 per annum per bed.
Taking the basic technology of a phone station and a television monitor and some engineer install time it is hard not to imagine that cost being repaid several times over in the first year by the £1,000.
So why does Patientline have to charge so much? I would bet its pretty likely because they are having to pay the NHS a huge premium for their disgraceful 15 year monopoly on hospital radio and tv services at many NHS hospitals and that this money from patients wanting to just see radio and tv is being used to cross subsidise doctors, nurses, operations and so on. Since Patientline is not coining it themselves there seems to be no other possible explanation. Unless of course Mr Derek Lewis is paying himself a salary fo £50 million per annum? That is fiddling while Rome burns so to speak.
If the service had to just pay its costs and maintenance there is no way one of these bed side stations wth tv should cost more than £350 and the engineer install time may be £100. It is hard to think of any reason that Patientline is making a loss at the daily rental price and incoming phone prices other than that a huge cross subsidy to NHS medical services is going on.
So let the system make a charge for what it is actually worth but let it be the £5 a week or so that is all that could possibly be needed to cover costs of the equipment and some profit to Patientline and let there not be a double whammy by obscene and unaffordable prices for incoming phone calls. And "30 an hour to call one's loved ones in hospital while they are forced to keep their mobile phones switched is to me an obscene and disgraceful charge.
I assume if Patientline went bust the bedside systems would then revert to the NHS who could run them at cost. So non obscene premium for incoming calls and say £3 a week to rent.
The trouble with people like you is that you don't evaluate all the facts but just have a pompously loyalist wish to always support the establishment line.
I am not following the 'establishment line', I am giving you the history on the situation to do with patient telephones and entertainment systems, as for facts, not sure you could get anyone better qualified who deals with the patients every week in hospital, if any one group would want to defend patients do you not think it would be Hospital Radio stations. Hospital Radio stations are independent, volunteers run them and most are Charities, raising funds to supply the service 24 hours a day 7 days a week commercial free to all patients.
Your explanation on how much you think they make out of calls and how easy it is to run, sounds like the ideal company, but obviously not likely as they are making a LOSE, the Trusts do not make a penny out of them FACT- Patientline runs the system for free to the Trust that’s what they like about it, so they can keep the money they do have (from us taxpayers) for operations, staffing, new equipment etc
I do not understand why you think if Patientline went bust the so called NHS could run them at cost, if a company running it charging a 49p a min for some incoming calls (at certain times I might add) cannot break even, how do you think the NHS will? They will still have running costs, staffing, repairs, external content companies to pay etc etc. And it would not be the NHS as such; it would be down to individual Trusts.
I will say it again, this is a difficult situation, who pays for the running costs of this bit of kit, it cannot be cheap to run, or as you say Patientline would be conning it in, that they are obviously not.
The comment - 'The daily charge for the equipment, paid by the patient, is surely for the provision of the 'Service'?' from Firestop above, is not correct, Patients are logged on for FREE no daily charge. They do not have to use it if they do not want to, all radio channels are free.
Patients pay 10p a min for outgoing calls, cheaper than a BT payphone! So a relative/friend can come in and buy a phone card for them and then they can ring friends and family with it - at 10p per min.
I think Ofcom have a big problem, if they stop this call rate (for certain incoming calls) Patientline have said they cannot survive, that is obviously a fact as they are making a lose charging this at the moment and I am sure Ofcom will see this from the company accounts. So say they do stop it, Patineline throws in the towel, who would pick it up without one of the main ways they produce funds to run the service, and try and make a profit and be saddled with heavy debt that would be left from the demise of Patientline. Unlikely any other communications company, so what about the NHS, well they would leave it to the Trusts, and they are very unlikely to take it on, as most are in heavy debt as it is.
Me thinks a political hot potato, not good for the Government to be in this situation as they championed these state of the art communication entertainment systems in hospitals and as Ofcom are a Government quango, I think they will not stop this revenue stream for Patientline that keeps them slightly a float, but we will see, I believe the report is due out at the end of January from Ofcom.