Quote:The Department of Health clearly state, however, that there is no ban on the use of this number.
While there is no explicit ban on 0844 numbers worded exactly like that in the printed guidelines, it is clearly stated that GPs can only use 0844 numbers if they cost less to call than 01 and 02 numbers. The problem for GPs is that 0844 numbers do not cost less to call than 01 and 02 numbers. Therefore 0844 numbers are effectively banned, even if many of those in charge can't bring themselves to actually state that outright.
Quote:This means that the cost of a call to the practice is comparative to a call being made to an equivalent geographical standard BT land line number.
Since when has the provider of the line owned by the person you are calling had anything to do with the costs? Calling someone with an 01 number rented from BT costs the same as calling someone with an 01 number rented from Sky as long as both calls are made by the same method. Or were they talking about calling
from a BT landline and got confused?
It is the callers phone service supplier that sets the charges for the calls that are made. A study of the call costs for all the major landline providers confirms that 0844 numbers either cost more or cost substantially more to call than 01 and 02 numbers. The costs are not comparative and 0844 numbers fail the test of costing the same or less than calling 01 numbers.
This also applies when calling from a mobile phone where 0844 numbers always cost more to call than 01 numbers.
Quote:The 084 telephone provider NEG undertook an extensive analysis of call costs to support GPs with compliance. Practices used this as the basis of the audit they undertook
The numbers that NEG used are flawed, inaccurate and are not representative.
Quote:Unless guidance is produced, which states that practices are not allowed to use 084 numbers
I'd have thought that this quote from the Secretary of State is clear enough?
Quote:We have made it very clear that GPs should not be using 0844 numbers for that purpose and charging patients for them.
See:
http://www.theyworkforyou.com/debates/?id=2012-03-27a.1326.4&s=%28no+OR+not%29+A...However, GPs never "charge patients for calls". The phone service company that the caller uses is the one that sends the bill and collects the money.
Quote:This includes practices demonstrating their intention to rectify the costing of their 084 numbers
GPs do not set the call charges for their numbers. The GP's telephone service provider do not set the call charges for the GPs numbers. Call charges are set by the company that the
caller uses to make a call to their GP. However, GPs can influence the cost that callers pay by the type (01/02, 03, 084, 087) of number that they choose for their service.
It's galling to think that the people charged with enforcing this regulation have absolutely no clue how the telephone system actually works.
In order to comply with the directive that all callers must not pay more to call a GP than they would pay to call an 01 number, the GP must use an 01, 02 or 03 number.
Quote:Practices have to provide assurances that comparative costs are the same. This includes calls from mobile phones or from other specific call plans/tariffs that may be in existence from other telecom services.
Where 0844 numbers are concerned, they cannot do so. 0844 numbers cost more than 01/02/03 numbers. It's very clear and can be confirmed by looking at the tariff lists for Vodafone, O2, Orange, T-Mobile, Three, Tesco Mobile, Virgin, Lebara, TalkMobile, GiffGaff, etc, for mobile calls and for BT, Sky, Virgin, TalkTalk, and many others for landline calls.
I cannot understand how more than two years after 0844 numbers were banned, certain people continue to try to defend the indefensible.