Quote:This does not mean that all calls to GP practices and NHS bodies must be charged at the same rate as an Ofcom-regulated call from a BT landline.
It appears to be further obfuscation of the details designed to confuse the reader, and allows GPs to attempt to fob people off by quoting something that appears at first glance to negate some of the complaints about the usage of 0844 numbers.
It actually means that "for whatever telephone number the GP advertises, when people call it from a mobile phone or from a landline other than BT, the GP doesn't have to ensure that those calls cost the same amount of money as had that call been made from a BT landline".
But that isn't the argument against the usage of 0844 numbers by GPs.
The argument is that calls to an 0844 number almost always cost more than the same call would have cost to an 01/02/03 number when called:
* from a landline that has bundled inclusive landline minutes,
* from a landline that pays a pence-per-minute rate for calls,
* from a mobile that has bundled inclusive landline minutes,
* from a mobile that pays a pence-per-minute rate for calls.
In almost all cases, whatever call plan they have and wherever they call from, patients are paying more to call a GP that uses an 0844 number than they would have paid to call a GP using an 01/02/03 number.
GPs may try to use the new wording to tell you "of course calling an 0844 number from a mobile costs more than calling an 0844 number from a landline - the NHS regulations specifically mention it; tough luck".
Your answer should be "0844 numbers almost always cost more to call than 01/02/03 numbers, however you call them. THAT is the point and it means you're still in breach of the regs by using an 0844 number."
The NHS guidance is that calls to GPs should cost no more than when calling an 01 or 02 number. To comply with that edict, GPs should NOT be using numbers that begin 084 or 087. Specifically, GPs should use only numbers beginning 01/02/03.