Another media article:
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Patients and relatives at two Norfolk hospitals could be freed from "blackmail" phone charges, thanks to an investigation by a government watchdog.
Relatives are being charged up to 16 times the cost of a standard BT call to contact loved-ones at the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital and the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, King's Lynn.
Patients themselves pay out three times more than on a home phone to use bedside handsets, and as much as £3.50 a day to watch television on individual screens.
But now the charges - branded "blackmail" by Norwich North MP Ian Gibson - could be slashed because of an investigation by Ofcom, which regulates phone and television services.
The watchdog says Patientline, the firm that runs the service, could be breaking competition laws because of high charges for dialling in to hospitals and the use of recorded messages at the start of calls that ramp up the cost.
Ofcom is also concerned about the length and the exclusive nature of deals struck between hospitals and the firm.
The worries are backed up by a NHS-commissioned report quietly released in March which found 90pc of patients rated the cost of incoming calls as expensive, with 62pc saying the same for outgoing calls. The study found that patients in hospital for a week racked up average bills of £46.98, even before taking into account the cost of relatives' calls.
Mobile phone use is banned in most hospital areas because of the risk of interference with lifesaving equipment.
Dr Gibson said: "I have always thought that patients were being fleeced, and I am glad something is being done about it.
"It is absolutely disgraceful that people are being ripped off. When people are in hospital they have enough to worry about without this big expense.
"People want to know how their loved ones are and they might be phoning several times a day. They are almost being blackmailed."
Dr Gibson said he would write to Ofcom to pass on dozens of complaints from constituents about the charges.
Patients' Association chairman Michael Summers has also backed the inquiry.
"Overall it will be beneficial to patients to have bedside telephone and television facilities, but it should not be at any price," he said.
"You have a captive audience of patients, many of whom are elderly, and in many cases those trying to contact them may be elderly themselves. In many cases calls to America or Australia would cost less."
But Patientline boss Derek Lewis said the inquiry would "vindicate" the company's contracts with 155 NHS hospitals. [...]
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