http://www.lep.co.uk/news/Doctors-accused-of-ripoff-phone.3178994.jpDoctors accused of rip-off phone lines
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Doctors at surgeries in Lancashire have been accused of using rip-off telephone lines to cash in on their patients.
At least four GP surgeries in Preston have abandoned their "01772" area code number in favour of the more expensive "0844" prefix - a move branded by Preston's MP as 'disgraceful'.
And many others throughout Lancashire are believed to have followed suit forcing patients - including pensioners, the chronically ill and disabled - to pay higher call charges.
Although not officially classed as "premium rate", the new numbers are up to 4p a minute more expensive to call from standard BT landlines, and can cost up to 35p a minute using a mobile phone.
In the Preston area, Ashton Health Centre in Ashton, Fishergate Hill Surgery in central Preston, Briarwood Medical Centre in Ashton and Riverside Medical Centre, in Walton-le-Dale, have abandoned their "01772" area code numbers for an "0844" prefix.
Nearly all mobile phone and landline operators exclude 0844 numbers from free minutes available with fixed-price contracts.
Mobile operators charge contract and pay-as-you-go customers between 15p and 35p per minute to call the prefix at all times.
There are fears that pensioners and others with chronic illness or disability who have to contact their surgery regularly will run up higher bills.
Preston's Labour MP Mark Hendrick said: "I cannot see them doing this unless it is paying them or they're making money from it.
"At the worse, if they are making money, it would be disgraceful. If they are saving money, then costs are being thrown onto the patient."
A spokesman for Central Lancashire PCT said: "The 0844 is a local rate telephone number and not a premium rate.
"GPs - as independent contractors - have a choice of the telephone systems they adopt."
However, 0844 operator Network Europe Group (NEG) argues that their service allows patients to wait in a queue or leave messages instead of simply receiving an engaged tone.
A Department of Health spokesman said: "NHS organisations have a duty to ensure that they provide the best possible service to patients without exploiting them."
Derrick Lawton, 56, of Powis Road, Ashton-on-Ribble, Preston, found out Ashton Health Centre, on Pedders Lane, had switched to the higher price system.
He has now lodged a formal complaint with the practice as well as with Central Lancashire PCT.
Mr Lawton today said: "The NHS is supposed to be free at the point of use and that is why we pay taxes and National Insurance premiums."We should not have to pay a 'booking fee' to arrange to see the doctor and that is what ringing an 0844 number actually does.
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