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NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers (Read 257,208 times)
Dave
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Re: NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers
Reply #15 - Aug 4th, 2008 at 3:23pm
 
idb wrote on Aug 3rd, 2008 at 11:10pm:
Hospitals made £80,000 on calls

<< ...
[the trust] said the phone system was more efficient and benefited patients as the cash was reinvested in services. Contact forms have been posted on the trust website so people can make appointments and inquires without phoning.
>>

I would like to reiterate the point made above about Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust, and that is that when the number was introduced they said it was "charged at local rates."

My post made previously on this topic is as follows:

Dave wrote on May 22nd, 2008 at 7:14pm:
Further to the press release from when they introduced the new number:

http://www.midyorks.nhs.uk/News/New+hospital+telephone+number.htm

The page has now been amended:

Quote:
All calls to the new number, no matter where you are calling from across the UK, will be charged at local rates*.

* Please note that this was correct at the time of going to press



Proof, as if more proof were needed that Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust didn't know what it was doing when it introduced its 0844 number comes in the form of a leaflet published in 2006 when it was introduced:

http://www.midyorks.nhs.uk/NR/rdonlyres/F3B05D98-3D06-4AC9-8916-1BC8847AF2FB/0/M...

Quote:
Advanced telephone system

In May 2006, we introduced a new telephone system to provide one main switchboard number for all calls. By having one contact number for all our hospitals, we are aiming to manage the large volume of calls we receive from patients and visitors in a quicker and more efficient way.

The new number has the capacity to take a large number of calls at any one time and we plan to include automated facilities so that callers are quickly directly to the appropriate hospital and department. Callers will also have the choice to speak to one of our switchboard operators if they require help or assistance. We are given a small revenue by the network provider of the 0844 number, which does not impact on the callers’ charge. This revenue is spent on improving and developing the telephone infrastructure overall for patients and visitors.

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« Last Edit: Aug 4th, 2008 at 3:24pm by Dave »  
 
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Re: NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers
Reply #16 - Aug 5th, 2008 at 11:52am
 
http://www.ehiprimarycare.com/news/4025/hopsitals'_084_numbers_makes_trust_%C2%A380000

Hopsitals' 084 numbers makes trust £80,000
05 Aug 2008

<<
GP practices and hospitals may face increased pressure over use of 084 telephone numbers following a revelation from a hospital trust that it has made more than £80,000 from use of a 0844 telephone number over the last two years.

The Mid-Yorkshire Hospitals Trust was forced to publish its income from the revenue-sharing telephone number following a Freedom of information request made by its local newspaper.

NHS organisations including GP practices that use 0844 numbers have been criticised by MPs and other campaigners for making money from NHS patients. The government launched an evidence gathering exercise into use of the numbers in primary care in March but has yet to publish the results of its investigations.

The income made by the Mid-Yorkshire Hospitals Trust has been condemned as “indefensible” by the Patient’s Association which said that hospitals should not be allowed to make money from patients’ telephone calls.

More than 800 GP practices in England use 0844 numbers as well as 15 hospital trusts which use either 0844 or 0845 numbers. NHS Direct also uses a premium rate 0845 number and last week told EHI Primary Care that it had no plans to switch to a standard rate 03 number reserved for its use.

The Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust replaced its standard rate dialling codes with an O844 number in May 2006. The change means the trusts now receive 0.0275p for every ten-second call and patients pay 5p a minute from a landline and more from a mobile telephone.

The trust told the Wakefield Express newspaper that it had generated “in the region of £82,000” since the introduction of the numbers for Pinderfields, Pontefract and Dewsbury hospitals.

However in a statement issued to E-Health Insider the trust defended the use of the numbers and said it had no plans to change its telephone number although it would continue to monitor national policy and guidance and consider changes in accordance with that guidance.

Tony Waite, acting chief executive at the trust, said: “In common with other organisations across the country, we introduced our 0844 number to better manage the large volume of calls we receive from patients and visitors in a quicker and more efficient way.

“Our four hospitals serve a population of more than half a million people and the benefit of having our current system means that we not only have the capacity to take a large number of calls at any one time, but callers only have one number to remember when contacting any of our hospitals.”

Waite said the trust recognised that a direct dial number was more convenient for some patients and had publicised direct dial numbers for its wards and departments to local GPs and to patients.

He added: “We receive 0.0275p for a ten second call by the network provider of the 0844 number. This money has been reinvested into clinical services at our trust to ensure that we deliver high quality care to our patients. We also continue to make improvements to the 0844 telephone service. This includes introducing an automated system, which means that callers can be put through more quickly to the right ward or department. We expect this to be in place by the end of the year.”
>>
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SilentCallsVictim
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Re: NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers
Reply #17 - Aug 6th, 2008 at 12:46pm
 
Members may be interested to note that until 13:15 today the following FAQ answer was on the Mid Yorkshire NHS Hospital Trust website:

Quote:

What is the cost of the 0844 number?

Our 0844 numbers are charged at local call rates (up to 5p per minute)
as with local numbers prefixed with 01924 or 01977. The 0844 number doesn't charge patients at a higher rate
but some telephone service providers offer special packages where their customers either get free or discounted calls.  We believe that 0844 numbers are excluded from some of these offer packages and continue to be charged at a local rate.

We would therefore suggest that anyone who subscribes to a phone package to check directly with their provider which numbers are excluded.  We would welcome the decision by these particular service providers to start including 0844 numbers as part of their inclusive call packages - so that our patients who subscribe to them can contract us free of charge.

This item has now been removed pending investigation of a suggestion that the information is inaccurate and misleading.

The Trust has been told that all callers pay more for calling call type “g6” numbers than geographic numbers, and that “local rate” has not applied to residential telephone tariffs since 2004. It has also been told that this surcharge, and the exclusion from packages, is because these numbers are used for revenue sharing.

The income to the Trust has to come from somewhere, it is not a gift from the telephone companies. It is obtained from callers, primarily patients, who pay a surcharge on their telephone bill as a fee for accessing the hospital’s services.

The Trust has been offered help from campaigners in discovering what is really going on, so as to help it make the right decision.
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Re: NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers
Reply #18 - Aug 28th, 2008 at 7:26pm
 
One which appears to have been missed of the list is Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS Trust. This is a mental health trust, rather than an acute (hospital) trust.
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Re: NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers
Reply #19 - Sep 6th, 2008 at 1:41pm
 
University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust has placed itself on the list of those who charge patients by way of 0844 telephone numbers.

http://www.uhl-tr.nhs.uk/formedia/press-releases/july-to-september-2008/septembe...

<<
One phone call away
Press Release 825,  04/09/2008  

Leicester's hospitals are just a phone call away  

You can now call any of Leicester's three hospitals from a single number: 0844 967 0460.  We have introduced this new number to provide a more effective and efficient telephone service for local people.

The aim of this service is to provide a single point of telephone contact for patients, carers and professionals for information and access to our services.

Darren Brown, Leicester Hospitals telecommunications manager said,"We expect our new 0844 number to improve the experience for anyone calling up. We will be able to provide a fast and efficient referral pathway across all services and between professionals providing patient care."

"This new number will also save the Trust money. Without this we would have to pay to route calls between our hospital sites."

The Trust does not make any money from the 0844 number which only costs callers the price of a local call, no matter where you ring from in the UK. However if you call from a mobile, standard network charges will apply.
>>

Numbers beginning 0844 967 are in BT charge band g17 which are charged at 3 pence per minute during the weekday daytime, 2 pence per minute during the evening and 1 pence per minute at the weekend from a BT landline. The prefix is allocated to Gamma Telecom.
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« Last Edit: Sep 6th, 2008 at 1:45pm by Dave »  
 
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Re: NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers
Reply #20 - Sep 6th, 2008 at 2:03pm
 
How ironic - one part of Leicester's health service is taking on new 08 numbers, whilst another is at least discouragng them:

http://www.leicestermercury.co.uk/displayNode.jsp?nodeId=132407&command=displayC...
Quote:
NUMBER IS NOT UP FOR EXPENSIVE SURGERY CALLS

BY CATHY BUSS
HEALTH CORRESPONDENT

10:30 - 27 August 2008


Patients are to carry on paying higher call charges to their GP surgeries, it emerged today.

A health trust said it could not justify spending more than £1 million to pay off contracts for surgeries using the higher-cost 0844 or 0445 telephone numbers.

Instead, Leicester City Primary Care Trust (PCT) said it would work with surgeries using the numbers to warn patients of the costs of calls as soon as they ring.

At the moment, calls from a BT residential line can cost about 5p a minute, compared with 35p a minute from a Vodafone pay-as-you-go mobile.

In a package of proposed measures to cut costs being considered by the trust's board of directors later this week, there are plans to help make it quicker for patients to get through to their doctor.

There will also be help for surgeries not using the numbers but wanting to update their telephone systems.

Campaigners accused PCT managers of "tinkering at the edges of the problem".

David Gorrod, a member of the Leicester Mercury Patients' Panel and former chairman of the patient and public involvement forum for Leicester's hospitals trust, said: "The PCT promised to tackle this issue some months ago.

"At the beginning, it promised effective action to rectify a system which is penalising patients.

"This is about leadership. At some stage, a decision has to be taken as to whether primary care is being led by the PCT or GPs."

One patient, who asked not to be named, said: "You can be on the phone for 20 minutes in the morning trying to get through - and all at this higher charge, which doesn't seem right.

"I find it easier to walk 20 minutes to the surgery."

Toby Sanders, the PCT's director of primary care, said he could understand disappointment, but it was difficult to justify spending £1.5 million not on clinical care.

He said the cash equated to 42,000 lifestyle checks in pharmacies and an extra 2,400 appointments for patients to see their GP in the evening or at weekends.

Mr Sanders said: "If the recommendations are approved by the PCT board, we will send a clear message to all GP practices that we will not support any new contracts being entered into with 084 number providers.

"We will work with the 25 practices with these numbers to minimise the impact of the potential cost to patients.

"This will include things such as new messages when people call surgeries, to warn them of the costs, and redesigning the messages to allow quicker access through the system."

He said he realised the recommendation might be "less than campaigners hoped for", but the review had revealed how tight and binding contracts for the telephone systems were.

Mr Sanders said: "Most of the contracts held by GPs have between five and seven years left to run.

"The package of measures proposed will help to address the position."
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Re: NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers
Reply #21 - Sep 6th, 2008 at 2:35pm
 
Quote:
Toby Sanders, the PCT's director of primary care, said he could understand disappointment, but it was difficult to justify spending £1.5 million not on clinical care.

[…]

He said he realised the recommendation might be "less than campaigners hoped for", but the review had revealed how tight and binding contracts for the telephone systems were.

Mr Sanders said: "Most of the contracts held by GPs have between five and seven years left to run.

[…]

This shows that the telephone providers must be laughing all the way to the bank! And this is just in the Leicester area!  Shocked Shocked Angry Cry
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SilentCallsVictim
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Re: NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers
Reply #22 - Sep 6th, 2008 at 3:10pm
 
Dave wrote on Sep 6th, 2008 at 2:35pm:
Quote:
spending £1.5 million


So Mr Sanders is content to justify NHS patients paying this sum towards the cost of obtaining NHS treatment!

One assumes that there is some exaggeration in the way in which this figure has been calculated. Furthermore, the idea of having to buy GPs out of their contracts with a single penalty payment does not represent the most sensible way of approaching a proper resolution to this problem.

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Re: NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers
Reply #23 - Sep 6th, 2008 at 3:47pm
 
SilentCallsVictim wrote on Sep 6th, 2008 at 3:10pm:
One assumes that there is some exaggeration in the way in which this figure has been calculated. Furthermore, the idea of having to buy GPs out of their contracts with a single penalty payment does not represent the most sensible way of approaching a proper resolution to this problem.


I suggest that all GPs who showed this level of utter dereliction of duty to their patients and the requirement to provide them with access to treatment within the terms of the NHS GP contract should take a substantial penalty hit on their own salaries of at least £10,000 per year for 3 years to pay towards at least a part of the cost of unscrambling the contracts.  That would make them think again about imagining that other people don't mind having to pay a little extra for something that was previously charged at normal rate.

Also surely some sort of class action could also be initiated by lawyers representing affected 0844 using NEG and other similar firms for deliberate deception by NEG and other companies about the cost of 084 calls to the surgeries involved.  I think it is doubtful that many of these GPs would have actually gone ahead with the contracts if they had been aware of issues such as the calls costing up to 40p per minute on mobile phones etc, etc.  NEG sold many of these contracts by old fashioned deliberate deception although a competent GPs surgery should have read the contract fully and done its own research before signing a contract of this nature.  Sadly it seems that many GPs and/or their gung ho and fresh faced so called practice managers did not. Shocked Angry Cry

Or how about a class action against Ofcom against this being an inevitable consequence of it not having not properly discharged its duties under Section 3(i) of the Commuications Act 2003? Smiley
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Re: NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers
Reply #24 - Sep 6th, 2008 at 4:03pm
 
NGMsGhost wrote on Sep 6th, 2008 at 3:47pm:
Also surely some sort of class action could also be initiated by lawyers representing affected 0844 using NEG and other similar firms for deliberate deception by NEG and other companies about the cost of 084 calls to the surgeries involved.  I think it is doubtful that many of these GPs would have actually gone ahead with the contracts if they had been aware of issues such as the calls costing up to 40p per minute on mobile phones etc, etc.  NEG sold many of these contracts by old fashioned deliberate deception although a competent GPs surgery should have read the contract fully and done its own research before signing a contract of this nature.  Sadly it seems that many GPs and/or their gung ho and fresh faced so called practice managers did not. Shocked Angry Cry

It seems that GPs won't do anything and that patients will have to continue to be charged for NHS services.

Of course, assuming GPs consider that they were "misold" the systems, they are in a much stronger position to take their providers to court than patients are to take the GPs to court who have broken their contracts which ban charging patients.
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Re: NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers
Reply #25 - Sep 6th, 2008 at 4:24pm
 
Dave wrote on Sep 6th, 2008 at 4:03pm:
[quote author=NGMsGhost link=1188830484/15#23 date=1220716072]Also surely some sort of class action could also be initiated by lawyers representing affected 0844 using NEG and other similar firms for deliberate deception by NEG and other companies about the cost of 084 calls to the surgeries involved.


I bet they will take action if they think they might suffer a £20,000 per annum hit in their own personal pockets on their salary from their PCT for using these numbers.

If GPs were hit in their pockets like their patients are then they would soon see the disadvantages of using an 0844 prefixed phone number. Wink
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Re: NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers
Reply #26 - Sep 6th, 2008 at 4:43pm
 
If we are considering penalties, we must note the role of the Department of Health and the PCTs who were happy to encourage and promote use of Surgery Line funded as it is out of the foolish and mistaken belief that 0844 numbers offered a "guaranteed low rate".

We must also consider those patients who are very happy to pay a little extra for a telephone service that is better than that available previously. One understands that in some surgeries their views contributed to the decision to adopt the 0844 number. Under the present arrangements covering co-payments, one could argue that they should be denied all NHS treatment from the GP.

I can understand the "punish those who are to blame" approach, and there is undoubtedly much blame that can be assigned. This should not be entirely forgotten, however I do not however see it as providing the most effective foundation for a way forward from where we are now.
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Media: Calling hospital still costs dear
Reply #27 - Sep 13th, 2008 at 12:03pm
 
Source: Evening Gazette

http://www.gazettelive.co.uk/news/teesside-news/2008/09/13/calling-hospital-stil...

Calling hospital still costs dear

<<
A TEESSIDE Hospital is continuing to profit from its patients despite promises to remove its fixed rate phone line.

North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Trust acquired an 0844 number two years ago so that it would have one number covering its three hospital sites.

But the trust reverted to its original numbers at the end of January this year following complaints from patients about the increased cost.

The calls generated about £15,000 a year for the hospitals.

The trust agreed to remove the fixed rate number from all new correspondence but today patients are still receiving letters advising them to call the 0844 number.

Councillor Julia Cherrett, of Eaglescliffe said: “I have just received a change to an outpatients appointment letter and am advised that if I can’t keep it, to telephone 0844 811 3000.

“More than six months after the Evening Gazette reported that University Hospital of North Tees had scrapped its premium rate 0844 telephone number, why are patients still receiving letters showing this number?

“People can contact the hospital at local call costs on 01642 617617 and I am calling on hospital bosses once again to make this known to people.

“They bowed to pressure to change the number back yet they are still generating an income from it.

“I appreciate they need to use up old stocks of stationery but this number was in the main body of the letter.”

Chief executive for North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Foundation Trust Alan Foster said: “We have had the 0844 number for outpatient appointments in place for some years and we overlooked this when reverting back to our original switchboard number. We’d like to thank the Gazette for bringing this to our attention.

“We will change this on appointment letters and cards as soon as we possibly can but in the meantime people phoning to cancel and change appointments can ring the department direct on 01642 383838.”
>>
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Re: NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers
Reply #28 - Sep 13th, 2008 at 12:53pm
 
Why do they not merely have an announcement on the old 0844 number telling patients to call the geographic phone number as this will be cheaper for them.  That is what the BBC has done with its 0870 numbers.

You will note that when they closed down the geographic numbers in favour of the 0844 numbers the telco would of course had no problem with providing such announcement to call the new number IMMEDIATELY.

It seems to me the scammers actually want to keep the revenue sharing number going for as long as possible. Shocked Angry Smiley Smiley Smiley
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« Last Edit: Sep 13th, 2008 at 12:54pm by NGMsGhost »  

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Re: NHS hospitals on 0844 rip-off numbers
Reply #29 - Sep 16th, 2008 at 10:06am
 
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« Last Edit: Sep 16th, 2008 at 8:19pm by Dave »  
 
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