http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/health/healthmain.html?in_article...40p a minute... just to phone your GP
By DANIEL MARTIN
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Millions of patients are having to pay 40p a minute to phone their GP.
More than 1,500 of the 8,000 practices in England - one in five, with 10million patients between them - have flouted government guidance by switching to expensive 0844 numbers.
GPs can keep part of the charge patients pay when they call to fix an appointment, or get test results or repeat prescriptions.
Last night MPs, campaigners and the Department of Health demanded that doctors change back to local-rate numbers.
Tory MP Graham Stuart, who is campaigning on the issue, said: "For many people, calling their local surgery can be a stressful and worrying time.
Higher call charges are likely to have a particular impact on the chronically ill, the old, the disabled and those on low incomes.
"These people should be treated fairly, not as props for yet another money-making wheeze. It is up to the Department of Health to step in and put an end to this unacceptable practice."
Katherine Murphy, of the Patients Association, said: "It's a scandal and it's blighting the vulnerable and the elderly.
"You ring up and you're confronted with a long menu of options. And all the time it's costing, costing, costing an absolute fortune. And what happens to that extra money? Is it being invested in services? I don't think so."
Calls to 0844 numbers calls cost 5p a minute from a landline and 40p from a mobile.
The Department of Health has tried repeatedly to stop GPs using high-cost numbers.
In 2005, it issued guidance over complaints that GPs were using premium-rate 0870 numbers, which are even more expensive.
But doctors moved on to 0844 numbers, which, although not technically premium rate, are still much dearer than a local call.
In December last year, ministers issued further guidance, saying GPs should charge no more than the local call rate of 3.25p a minute.
But because family doctors are private operphonethe NHS cannot force them to change.
The Department of Health said last night: "GPs should consider using the 03 numbering range introduced earlier this year. Calls to these cost the same as a geographic call, regardless of what type of line the call is from. They can also be included in inclusive or low-cost call packages.
"We do not expect GPs to break existing contracts, but they should not be entering new ones that would involve patients being charged more than for a local call."
GPs now earn an average of £110,000 a year - up almost 60 per cent in just three years. They are also taking a higher proportion of the money they receive from the Government rather than investing in staff and services.
Service provider Network Europe Group said last night it had installed 0844 numbers in 1,200 surgeries and it believed more than 300 more had had 0844 or 0845 numbers installed by other companies.
A spokesman said the system benefitted patients because it allowed them to be placed in a queue rather than hear an engaged tone. Previously, 92 out of 100 people who called GPs heard an engaged tone or the was not answered. Part of the profit from each 0844 call goes to cover the installation of new switchboards and headsets, but once they have been paid for the GP is able to spend the money how he wished.
Patients routinely complain of the difficulty of getting hold of their GP to book an appointment, but Dr Richard Vautrey, deputy chairman of the British Medical Association's GP committee, said the new phones were improving the situation.
He claimed doctors did not make money from the lines and added: "Many doctors were encouraged to use them by their primary care organisation because of the benefits to both the practice and patients.
"Practices get a more efficient system and patients get through more quickly and spend less time on the phone, which has reduced the cost of calling the surgery for many patients.
"Where practices have installed these systems the result has been a dramatic improvement in overall patient satisfaction."
But the communications watchdog Ofcom said: "Public bodies should not offer an 08 number unless they also offer a normal number. They should be considering the new 03 numbers."
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