Ricardo wrote on Oct 7
th, 2007 at 9:55pm:
According to the reply from the ICO, they have spoken with NEG and they have said that the line is converted to a digital line, if it is not already one, and then they allocate the new number. The agreement with the surgery is for the rental of the new system and the surgery only know the 0844 number. As such I do not see that the underlying number will be made available.
It is possible that different surgeries have different contracts/set ups with NEG or could be with a different supplier for their phone systems, which may explain why your surgery has confirmed that they know the number but still will not release it.
Ricardo
I take it that "digital" means they have a VOIP connection. This may be true. However, I would find it very hard to believe that whenever a doctor or a member of the surgery staff call the surgery from outside they use the 0844 number.
Perhaps you should ask, under the FOI, for
all numbers in use by the surgery, and whether staff use the same number, 0844, to call into the surgery. It would also be interesting to know what is the maximum queue length within the system and the number of calls taken per day, per week, on average and the peak volumes. Also, what is the largest queue length actually experienced since the system was installed.
I know these are fairly deep questions, but we the public, have a legitimate reason for asking. The NHS surgeries are totally paid for by us, through our taxes, and we have a right to access to our surgeries. Why should some surgeries be allowed to charge a premium on that access, while the majoity of patients can call in at "normal" rates?