Mr Purt is not strictly correct, as there are nine surgeries covered by the Hywel Dda Health Board using 0844 numbers, although three are branches; there are six practices and only six different numbers. They are
listed here.
A summary covering all of the GIG Bwrddau Lechyd is
given here.
This is the current version of the information given in an earlier blog posting
GIG Bwrddau Lechyd to enforce principle of "free at the point of need" before the NHS can move forward. I am grateful to a Western Mail reporter for assistance with a little Welsh - see her story
Sixty GP surgeries asking patients to call them on high-rate numbers.
A copy of a message currently in the course of being sent to all of the PCT Cluster Chief Executives in England will shortly be published on my
NHS Patient Blog. Those following my campaigning activities through
my news feeds will be advised of this.
The message for the Chief Executives of the Wales Health Boards is very similar as they have similar duties in respect of identical contractual provisions imposed on GPs.
I hope that Mr Purt was not advised by the Health Board's leading authority on the relative cost of telephone calls when drafting his letter. His understanding of the reality of telephone call charges is very weak. The way that it is skewed in favour of 0844 numbers being acceptable causes one to wonder about the objectivity of his source of information.
To suggest that the vast majority of telephone users fall outside the terms of the provisions because they are only offered packages that include some inclusive calls is absurd. All residential BT and Virgin Media customers are thereby excluded as are all contract and some PAYG mobile users.
Mr Purt seems to believe that only those who are compelled to use a particular telephone service (perhaps payphone users?), having no choice, should be considered. He should therefore take a look at the relative cost of calling 0844 numbers from payphones. A list of relative call charges covering commonly used tariffs is
published here.
The first thing that Mr Purt needs to do is to review the terms of the
relevant contractual provisions and to note the exclusion of the word that is struck through below:
Quote:... persons will not involuntarily pay more to make relevant calls to the practice than they would to make equivalent calls to a geographical number ...
Any requirement that addresses the cost incurred in making a telephone call cannot disregard the fact that there is a wide market for telephone services. Some landline users do have the freedom to choose an arrangement whereby the cost of a "normal" geographic call during the daytime is more expensive than one which includes an amount that is passed on the call recipient. They are however unlikely to choose such an arrangement because of its effect on the relative cost of a call to their GP!
It is complete nonsense to suggest that this perverse situation is any way relevant to these important provisions, which exist to protect the principles of the NHS.