The worst hospital rip-offs

Emma Lunn
by Lovemoney Staff Emma Lunn on 10 October 2012  |  Comments 45 comments

If you're stuck in hospital or visiting a sick friend or relative, things can be difficult enough. But rip-off charges for everything from phone calls to parking can make the experience financially, as well as emotionally, draining.

The worst hospital rip-offs

I’ve had the misfortune to have a close relative in hospital for the past 10 days. The circumstances alone are bad enough but the experience has also introduced me to the another hospital rip-off: Patientline, a service which offers hospital patients a bedside telephone, TV and radio service.

Calling a patient at a hospital

Because the hospital is a good hour’s drive away from where I live I’ve been calling Patientline on a daily basis. Although staff are fairly relaxed about the use of mobile phones on the ward, the reception is so bad that calling Patientline is my only option if I want to speak to my family.

Each patient signed up to Patientline has a personal bedside phone number beginning 070, but calling this doesn’t get you straight through to the patient. If only.

First, you have to listen to a long preamble explaining that you’re calling a hospital and what this means (“Please remember whilst they [the patient] are in hospital they may be with medical staff or have difficulty in reaching the phone to answer your call so please be patient.”) At the end of the message the exorbitant call charges – 50p a minute from a BT landline – are revealed.

The message is carefully scripted to be as long-winded as possible – I’d regurgitate it in full here but I’m limited by a strict word count. I timed it though, and the message is just short of 90 seconds.

It’s an annoying waste of time but also one for which you pay at least 75p before you even speak to your friend or relative. And that’s on BT – my phone provider Virgin Media charges 51.07p a minute plus a 14.94p connection charge for the call. This equates to 92p just to hear the recorded message.

According to Hospedia, Patientline’s parent company, the message’s “overall content is the result of a wide variety of feedback we have had over the years due to the relative unfamiliarity of 070 numbers.” Hospedia says it’s “working on ways to try and reduce the length of the message.”

To help, I offered Hospedia an alternative script containing all the important information in just 10 seconds but its PR department haven’t responded.

Patients' phone and TV costs

Patients themselves pay a mere 10p a minute for outgoing calls; a fraction of the inbound call costs but still a lot more than standard call charges. As for TV charges, because my relative is on the children’s ward Patientline’s TV service is free from 7am to 7pm. The prices for TV for adults aren’t shown on Hospedia’s website but a quick Google suggests pricing starts at £1 for two hours’ TV or £10 a day.

Parking

Another common hospital rip-off is ever-increasing car parking charges. Figures from the Patients’ Association shows that more than a quarter of hospital trusts in England increased car parking charges for patients and visitors in the year to last April.

Although some cut prices, others more than doubled them, according to data from 197 hospital and mental health trusts. The average cost of an hour’s hospital parking across the UK is 77p, based on the average from a three-hour stay, but some trusts charge much more.

For example, Dorset County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust charges £1.60 for one hour, £2.10 for two and £4.20 for up to four.

Unsurprisingly hospital patients and visitors pay more in London; parking at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust costs £2.50 an hour on average, but up to £3.50 an hour in some cases.

Food and drink

Hospital patients and visitors also pay above the odds for snacks and drinks. Last month the Daily Star Sunday carried out some research into prices at restaurants, cafes and shops in NHS hospitals.

It found that hospitals across the UK are charging up to 50% more than supermarkets for cans of drink and confectionary.

For example, at St George’s Hospital in Tooting, south-west London, cans of Coke and KitKats cost 80p each, compared to a maximum of 61p at the supermarket. Meanwhile, a can of 300ml Coke at Harrogate District Hospital, North Yorkshire cost 95p – almost double the cost of the same item in a supermarket.

Have you spotted other hospital rip-offs? Should the Government do something to prevent these? Share your thoughts in the Comments box below.

More on rip-offs

The top 20 rip-offs of all time

Directory enquiries: the true cost of calling 118 numbers

Better protection from rip-off warranties

Huge increases in railway station car park charges

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Comments (45)

  • tellmemore
    Love rating 0
    tellmemore said

    If youwantto help prevent the NHS then might I suggest you read this then involved & sign this petition: https://secure.38degrees.org.uk/oct-poll-2012

    As members of 38 Degrees, each one of us helps decide the issues we work together on to make change happen. Knowing what all of us care about is vital, so every month or so a group of 38 Degrees members has the chance to vote on campaign priorities in a poll.

    Right now, across the country, 38 Degrees members are campaigning flat out to protect local health services from cuts and privatisation. It’s a clear example of people-power at work. But part of our strength as a movement is our ability to work on more than one issue at a time.

    Should protecting the NHS be top of the list? Should we still be working to clean up banking? Would you like to see more customer-powered campaigns like The Big Switch? Or is there an important issue missing?

    Please take two minutes to help decide which campaigns 38 Degrees should focus on:

    https://secure.38degrees.org.uk/oct-poll-2012

    Since 38 Degrees started over three years ago we’ve grown together into a powerful voice of over a million of us across the UK. Together we stood up to government plans to sell-off our forests, we tackled rip-off gas and electricity bills, and resisted the privatisation of our NHS. [1]

    When we campaign on the issues we choose together, we get things done! Just a few weeks ago thousands of us chipped in to buy a full page ad in the Telegraph newspaper. The hard-hitting ad was a shot across the bow of new Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt. It sent a strong people-powered message: we won’t let him get away with cutting and privatising our NHS. [2]

    Report on 28 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • tellmemore
    Love rating 0
    tellmemore said

    I was recently hospitalised for 6 days & totally refused to use or let any of my relatives/visitors pay for the rip off television service. I got my hubby to bring in his laptop & some DVD's & watched them on it.

    I have never been in favour of this service being installed & recall from my working days at our local hospital the many donated televisions. Hardly a month went by that such a donation was mentioned in our local paper yet nothing was heard about where they disappeard to!!

    Report on 28 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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