werdies
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However, a major flaw in the arrangement is that when Patientline is breach of a contract there's virtually nothing that can be done about it.
Well the contracts have been breached so often by all parties that they are pretty much redundant now.
That's easy to say, but how could they have been less expensive? You can't buy hospital bedside TV/phone/internet terminals off the shelf in Dixons. The current price of a flat screen monitor is irrelevant - it doesn't include the PC, the tuner, the phone, the card reader, and the custom software to drive it all. As with all electronic equipment the costs were much higher when the system was first developed a decade and a half ago, and they had to use the technology and materials available at that time. And terminals didn't just plug into handy mains sockets - the hospital had to be cabled up to connect the whole system together, with a control room for the phone exchange and all the other control apparatus, and each terminal installed on the wall along with its PC, and power distribution provided for them all. Even compared to consumer electronics of the time, bedside terminals were a very low volume production item, and they had to be custom designed and developed especially for the hospital enviroment. Newer terminals have been developed and deployed since then, no doubt at lower cost, but development costs are themselves high, so whilst technical advances are rapid, the costs of incoporating them can exceed the savings if changes are made too frequently.
There are far too many of them though, the vast majority at any one time are not being used at all. The future will see most wards lose all the units, and the remaining wards lose most of them. The operation will be much smaller, and some of these will replace older units elsewhere.
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