speedy wrote on Jul 7
th, 2011 at 12:01am:
I am going to phone West Kent PCT when I have double checked that there is no Standard Tariff on BT and it would be local if their was still Standard - will update after I have phoned BT
I have in my position a written statement from an authoritative source in BT, endorsed by its communications office, which confirms:
Quote:Standard rate were abolished years ago and now all the customers who make calls with BT are either on the weekend, evening and weekend or anytime calls plan, apart from the ones on BT Basic our social telephony tariff.
The officer concerned has promised to make enquiries about why a rate which does not apply to any customers is still published in the customer price list.
speedy wrote on Jul 7
th, 2011 at 12:01am:
Quote:"Generally calls made to NHS contractors using 0844 number should be charged at a local rate if calls are made from callers with a BT Standard Rate Tariff only."
This is an interesting policy for West Kent PCT to have developed at its own discretion.
It is quite different from the terms of the relevant contract, as approved by parliament, which states:
Quote:"having regard to the arrangement as a whole, persons will not pay more to make relevant calls to the practice than they would to make equivalent calls to a geographical number"
This is the essence of the requirements which West Kent PCT has the powers and duty to enforce.
West Kent PCT has adopted a policy whereby "persons" is qualified, so that it applies to nobody, in what amounts to a re-writing of this simple statement. This is a rather radical interpretation of its statutory duty to have regard to the rights under the NHS Constitution. The first of these Rights states that all persons have access to NHS services without charge, except those charges explicitly sanctioned by parliament.
Ann Sutton, the Chief Executive of the Kent and Medway PCT Cluster, along with her 50 colleagues, has received
this message. Officers of the PCTs cannot claim that they have not been invited to consider the reality of the situation. They have a duty to verify claims made by others and to disregard spurious suggestions about the position taken by the Department of Health and the false idea that there is any general regulation of charges for calling 084 numbers, or any regulation relating that cost to the cost of calling geographic numbers.
It is for each PCT to understand the simple words quoted above, as they are written. If they choose to add their own qualifications then that is a matter for which the accountable officer (Ms Sutton in this case) is fully responsible. I strongly believe that to do so is to redefine the principles of the NHS for the locality which they serve. If this involves withdrawing rights under the NHS Constitution, they are in breach of the terms of Section 1 of the Health Act 2009.