http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/health/healthmain.html?in_article...Patients charged up to 40p a minute to call family doctors
By JAMES TOZER
Last updated at 20:49pm on 7th March 2008
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Patients are being charged up to 40p a minute to call their GP despite official guidance that family doctors should not use higher rate phone lines.
Around one in ten practices can now only be reached by using 0844 numbers.
They cost more than ordinary landlines, and doctors pocket money from every call.
Ministers have called on surgeries to switch back to normal-rate numbers.
Despite personal intervention from Health Secretary Alan Johnson, more GPs are signing up to the system.
Although phone tariffs for calling 0844 numbers vary widely, typical charges are 5p a minute from a landline, compared with just over 3p a minute to ring a normal-rate number, rising to up to 40p a minute from a mobile phone.
No figures for the total income brought in by the scheme have been published, but based on a surcharge of 2p per minute, even if the average call lasted just 60 seconds it would be in the region of £4million a year.
The surcharge is paid directly to surgeries. GPs say they don't make a profit from the 0844 numbers because they spend the money on installing and operating the now phone systems to replace their antiquated systems.
The move to higher rate phone lines comes at a time when GPs' salaries have increased by almost 60 per cent in four years to an average of £113,000 a year.
This week they agreed a new contract that will require them to open their surgeries for longer or take a pay cut - the deal came after the National Audit Office said the previous one struck in 2004 had been a bad deal for taxpayers.
The Department of Health wrote to all primary care trusts - which oversee local health budgets - this week saying there have been "a number of concerns" about 0844 numbers.
It reiterated guidance from 2006 that practices should not be entering into new contracts to use them and should instead set up numbers beginning 03 which cost no more to call than ordinary, local numbers.
Yesterday, Mr Johnson went further, saying that while he couldn't force GPs to comply, "if we have to take further measures, we will, because we want to get them to move across to 03 numbers".
His stance is backed by the communications watchdog Ofcom, which says public bodies should not use numbers beginning 08 unless they also offer conventional numbers as well.
The Department of Health is examining the issue and expects to announce later this month whether action will be taken.
One of the leading firms in the field, Network Europe Group, claims to have signed up 1,200 of the 10,000 GP practices in the UK and that calls are running at 17million a month.
Katherine Murphy, of the Patients' Association, said: "So much for the NHS being free at the point of need - surgeries shouldn't be forcing patients to use expensive phone lines.
"It's very confusing for elderly patients, and if you're calling from a mobile it can be quite costly as well."
Dr Richard Vautrey, deputy chairman of the British Medical Association's GPs committee, said: "There are undoubted benefits to patients from these systems, and it would be a retrograde step to get rid of them.
"There is no doubt that these numbers provide a much better level of patient satisfaction and improved call-handling."
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