Quote:Actually it is clearly you who do not understand and the fact that the Patientline equipment means that your sad little radio station (which I am sure is of very poor quality indeed and most patients other than the usual C2DE suspects will undoubtedly not enjoy) can be listened to for free in almost every bed means that your judgement has been warped about people being asked to pay £24.50 per week or £1,278 for watching television in their hospital bed.
I was basing my figures on the likely revenue take on each unit based on 365 x £3.50 minus say 20% bed non occupancy or patient non uptake.
Your guesses of the 'likely' revenue overstate it by at least a third even when the phone revenues are included.
Quote:If Patientline are paying £1,000 per bedside station installation clearly they are incompetent businessmen as with this high density volume of installations and the current cost of technology there is no way it should cost more than £500 per bed to install one of these systems and pay for the equipment. But then perhaps the installation company is run by another business connection of Mr Derek Lewis and/or perhaps he also has shares in the company carrying out the equipment installation? If Patientline are so inefficient that their installation costs really are £1,000 per bed they certainly deserve to go out of business.
On average it costs Patientline about £1M to equip a hospital, so divided by the average number of terminals comes out at just over £2,000 per terminal. Patientline does not sub-contact its installation work.
Quote:You were also very wrong on outgoing Patientline calls being cheaper than a BT Payphone but again conveniently duck those facts.
DC was wrong because the information was outdated. In the first years of Patientline's operation, outbound calls did cost about 10% less than BT payphone prices, and they have never been increased.