sherbert wrote on Apr 29
th, 2011 at 3:02pm:
As we have said many, many times on this site, no provider, land line or mobile, gives you free calls.
Inclusive maybe but they are never free.
There are some contexts in which that distinction is important, and the point is fairly made - I do not disagree.
We may however be considering the cost of a call to a GP surgery on a 084, as against a 01/02/03, number for a caller who has the latter as inclusive with their selected package.
In this case it is perfectly correct to say that a call to a 01/02/03 number would be "FREE OF ANY CALL CHARGE", whereas a 084 call would not.
Access to NHS services is (or rather should be) "free at the point of need". In fact this only means that it is "FREE OF ANY CHARGE BY THE NHS SERVICE PROVIDER". You may still have to pay your bus fare or for petrol and parking for your car when visiting the hospital or surgery. Similarly, you may have to pay the rental for your telephone line and perhaps a standard call charge when contacting your GP by telephone.
What is unacceptable is to incur an additional charge, above what is "standard", to the benefit of the NHS provider. That is what happens when GPs adopt revenue sharing telephone numbers or when hospitals impose car parking charges other than what would be normal for the locality.
Please understand that I do not disagree with the general point about what is "free" in absolute terms. We must however consider specific cases with reference to what is relevant and just what it is that something is "free of". "Free ... of a call charge", "Free ... of a premium charge" etc. is not the same as "Free ... of any cost". In common use of language we do not always add the extra words, but leave them to be assumed by the context.