Southport Visiter

‘Heartless’ hospital call firm slammed

- BY JAMIE LOPEZ jamie.lopez@reachplc.com @jamie_lopez1 southportn­ewspapersa­les@reachplc.com

ASERVICE which provides bedside phones in hospitals was blasted as “heartless” after asking a trust to pay £10,000 a month to give patients free access to its TV services.

Southport & Ormskirk Hospitals NHS Trust asked private firm Hospedia if its TV fees could be reduced or charged to the hospitals while strict visitor restrictio­ns are in place as it battles the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Currently, visiting is not allowed at the hospitals in either town, aside from in certain situations involving women in labour and child inpatients.

West Lancashire MP Rosie Cooper contacted the trust to ask about Hospedia’s phone provisions after a constituen­t was charged £11 for phoning her elderly mother at Southport Hospital.

Irene Simpkin’s 87-year-old mother Odile has been at the hospital for around two weeks after suffering multiple pelvis and hip fractures in a fall.

She made a 16-minute call to her mum and said she was charged £11.33.

Speaking to the BBC, Ms Simpkin said: “I thought that it was flipping outrageous, just horrendous. I just think it’s very, very greedy.

“There are so many people making concession­s, why do these companies continue to cash in?

“While all this is going on, can they not just make some sort of a deal where they cut those costs?”

According to Hospedia’s website, its services are used at 130 NHS sites across the country and in 75% of acute hospitals.It also says that it allows those in hospital to make calls without any cost, but charges 13p per minute for calls made to patients’ phones.

After contacting the trust’s chief executive, Ms Cooper was told that Hospeida had recently responded to a request for the hospitals to cover TV costs by proposing a £10,000 monthly fee. The company provides phones and TV services from the same devices and has frequently faced criticism for its prices.

The trust said it was disappoint­ed with the company’s suggested charges and has raised the matter with NHS England. Hospedia has now been accused of “cashing in” on the coronaviru­s crisis by Ms Cooper, who said she was “absolutely disgusted”.

The Labour MP said: “Businesses up and down the country are bending over backwards to support the effort, restaurant­s providing free meals, launderett­es washing NHS workers’ clothes for free, but here we have Hospedia charging premium rates for phonecalls to inpatients and offering to take the charge off the public but only in return for £10,000 per month from the hospital! The NHS should end the contract with heartless profiteeri­ng Hospedia as soon as possible.

“At a time such as this when we are warning the public about potential scammers, it is clear we don’t have to look too far to see where some businesses are happy to make a quick buck while others suffer.

“I have brought this to the attention of the Health Secretary demanding that he urgently intervene so that families can get to speak to their loved ones who are in hospital without the worry of overly expensive phone bills.”

Hospedia has been approached for comment.

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 ??  ?? Above, West Lancs MP Rosie Cooper is ‘‘absolutely disgusted’ by the operators Hospedia for the current charges relatives face when calling patients in hospital, right
Above, West Lancs MP Rosie Cooper is ‘‘absolutely disgusted’ by the operators Hospedia for the current charges relatives face when calling patients in hospital, right

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