Quote: ... if the Patientline director who saw the original business opportunity for Patientline was so concerned about people being able to communicate with relatives in hospital then why did he impose the 49p per minute incoming Patientline phone numbers.
He didn't. The cost was 50p per minute when Patientline started.
I can't answer for Patientline's policies on pricing, and must presume that the rates are set at the level that the company believes are required to achieve the revenue needed to cover its operating costs, repay its borrowings and provide a return for its investors.
Quote:As to the aeroplane tank fuel problem the issue stems from the TWA jumbo that blew up due to faulty old wiring causing a spark in the fuel tank.
I was not aware of that incident.
trevord wrote on Jan 9
th, 2006 at 10:02am:
Several times I've been in a plane on the ground during a stop-over and we've been told to switch off mobiles during re-fuelling, but could switch them back on afterwards.
I didn't know that - I've never been in a plane during a refueling stop. My experiences when flying have always been that mobiles must be turned of before taxi-ing for take-off, and not switched on again until well out of the aeroplane at the destination. The reason given is interference to aircraft systems. There are also restrictions for this reason on CD players, DVD players, and laptops fitted with CD or DVD drives. The fact that the request to switch off comes after boarding suggested to me that it was unconnected to fuel tanks.
trevord wrote on Jan 9
th, 2006 at 10:07am:
pw4 wrote on Jan 9
th, 2006 at 12:50am:
Tests have been conducted with a range of medical equipment and some found to be susceptible.
Can you substantiate this with some references please?
I regret I cannot, if by references you mean URLs or pointers to published documents. I have seen the document that was provided to hospitals, so I aware of its contents. I believe I may have a copy somewhere, and if can find some more details I will indeed post something - but I'm afraid holding breath would be inadvisable. Off the top of my head I can't even remember the name of the NHS Arm's Length Body that produced it. Most ALBs were disbanded last year and their functions absorbed into others or into the DoH.
trevord wrote on Jan 9
th, 2006 at 10:12am:
What's a "Concession agreement" if it's not a specific type of contract?
Attempting to play semantics like this just demonstrates how desparate Patientline are and how little justifiable reason they have in their favour.
A concession agreement is a contract. I did not state, nor meant to imply that it is not. It is the specific type of contract that applies when one business is carried out on the premises of another, such as retail outlets in stations and airports. Various concessions are awarded within hospitals such as retail outlets, fast food outlets, and patient TV and telephone terminal systems, so it is the appropriate term in this case.
My point was that the impression given in some postings was that Patientline has been given some form of exclusive contract to install in all the hospitals in all of the NHS's in the UK. In reality, Patientline has had to negotiate a concession agreement (ie: contract) with each hospital Trust, and in many cases has had to win it in competition with other suppliers.
And it wasn't Patientline that used the term in this thread, it was I.
Quote:If Patientline reduced the tv watching charge to £1.50 per day and changed the incoming phone number to 0870 (where call costs fall as low as 1.5p per minute at the weekend) then I'm sure the furore about Patientline would die down.
I would agree (once I've recovered from the shock of NGM suggesting that a company should use an 0870 number).
In fact, the numbers for contacting patients through Patientline in some hospitals are 0870.
Quote:I would have thought an increase in usage levels would offset the lower charges ...
You may be correct. Clearly Patientline does not concur. I don't know one way or the other.
Quote: ... plus in any case its obvious that the cost of new bedside terminals must have fallen heavily since Patientline started due to the advent of cheaper TFT screens etc, etc.
Yes it is. Or rather, it should have been - in fact I hadn't though of that. But of course that doesn't reduce Patientline's debt in respect of the equipment manufactured when the cost was higher, nor the ongoing operating costs.