Dave wrote on Sep 7
th, 2010 at 12:55pm:
Quote:Every month in the UK, 20 million patient calls to local GP surgeries using normal landlines result in an engaged tone. This startling research was submitted to the Department of Health today by Network Europe Group, the country's leading provider of enhanced telephony to Primary Care. This is the first time the true extent of how difficult it is to get through to local GPs in the UK has been revealed.
I have asked the Department of Health for a copy of this research; it demands close examination.
Others may wish to do the same, perhaps through formal FOI requests.
Quote:Data provided to NEG from its customer base, using BT's Network Call Performance Report, reveals that a staggering 93% of calls to a typical GP surgery get an engaged tone if they use a normal landline without a queuing facility. Over 5 million calls are made by patients to NEG GP sites each month. That means that it is safe to estimate that 23 million calls are made each month to normal landlines. The pattern analysis provided to GP surgeries by BT suggests that, for patients whose surgery uses normal landlines, whilst 1.6 million calls get through successfully to the local GP first time, over 20 million patient calls encounter an engaged tone.
The BT Network Call performance report is available to individual BT customers. The absence of a plural in the reference to this item suggests that
the key source element in this research could well have been a single GP practice. The practice in question may have been "typical" in some respects, however it will be interesting to see the evidence used to support the claim that the
93% call failure figure is typical.
(A "typical" NHS Patient may have a BT landline with the Unlimited Weekends Call Plan. Another "typical" NHS Patient may have BT Unlimited Anytime, cable TV, a contract mobile, a PAYG mobile, or no home telephone. Characteristics of typical cases may be useful as illustrations, but they cannot simply be used directly as the basis of a projection to a wider population, unless that characteristic can itself be established as being "typical". This cannot be done simply by association.)It will also be interesting to see which statistical theory is used to provide the "safety" found to support the overall projection, in particular the apparent assumption that 0% of surgeries with geographic numbers have a queuing facility.
(I comment here for the benefit of forum members who may be looking to challenge NEG, but I do not think it worth the trouble of engaging with incomplete nonsense in full public debate.)
For the sake of pursuing the key issue,
I am prepared to accept NEG's claim that Surgery Line is exceptional in that it requires the unlimited queuing facility available on the network through use of a non-geographic number, with the consequent additional cost. This could of course be provided through use of a 03 number, which NHS GPs in England who are tied into contracts for Surgery Line are required to adopt before 1 April 2011. Their contract for telephone service from Talk Talk permits a change from a 0844 to the equivalent 0344 number at any time. It is unfortunate for NEG that they have to incur the expense of a non-geographic number, as many would argue that for a typical GP surgery this is going much further than is necessary to provide a perfectly good service to patients.
As we have seen with NHS Direct, it is
over-costly solutions that are threatened by the need to make the NHS more cost-efficient in these straitened times. Improper use of revenue sharing numbers
can indicate that an over-costly solution has been used, so because the cost of the solution cannot be justified to the user, external funding has to be engaged - this is available from the caller's telephone company by using a revenue sharing number. If that company is not BT, then the cost will certainly be passed on as a premium charge to the caller. The "over-costly" point is not true in every case where a revenue sharing number is used, however it is probably true for Surgery Line which takes the improper funding even further to provide many other unnecessary "goodies".
If NEG is pressing the Department of Health to ensure that every GP provides an adequate and cost-effective telephone system then it has my full support. I doubt however that many will find the full cost of Surgery Line to meet these requirements - it does very much rely on what NEG calls its
"revolutionary co-funding" arrangement.
If NEG is trying once again to persuade the Department of Health that its ignorant and false assertion about the cost of telephone calls to 0844 numbers is true, then I can only agree with its assertion that
"facts" are what must be considered.
- It is a fact that callers on BT Call Plans, all other landline tariffs, mobile contracts, mobile PAYG tariffs and from public payphones pay more to call NEG 0844 numbers than an equivalent call to a geographic number.
- The fact that NEG is apparently unaware of this may be true, but it is irrelevant.
- It is also a fact that the BMA GPC believes that NEG's incompetent assurances about call costs are significant, but this too is irrelevant.
[Conclusions follow ...]