11-12-2025 08:44 AM
My husband is in hospital long term, internet and mobile coverage is very poor on ward. To talk to him I have to call his bedside phone. The costs are extortionate. From what I can work out (and it's not straightforward) it's costing me 93p/minute from ee and 13p/minute service charge, a whopping £1.06/minute! At one point ee was refunding their charges, is this still the case?
11-12-2025 08:57 AM
Hi @H1232
I think it was during covid that the charges were being refunded but as far as I know that policy was stopped so expect to be charged full price now.
EE don't set these prices. Is wifi calling an option? Is there free wifi in hospitals?
11-12-2025 09:00 AM - edited 11-12-2025 09:04 AM
In the distant past, many hospital trusts contracted with private operators to provide bedside phones - and used expensive 070-numbers with high incoming call costs. Well done checking first! Many wouldn't have.
I can't recall any mobile operator has ever given a blanket amnesty on calls to these numbers, and mobile use has become much more prevalent since.
Most hospitals should have in-building mobile coverage, or at the very least a WiFi network.
11-12-2025 09:07 AM
He can call my mobile foc for a minute or 2 before it cuts off. If we had a landline there'd be no time limit apparently. I was just questioning how Hospedia can be allowed to charge such extortionate amounts and also not be subject to Ofgem's regulatory powers, especially when many wards have poor mobile and internet coverage.
11-12-2025 09:21 AM - edited 11-12-2025 09:31 AM
An operator such as Hospidea clearly has commercial motivations, but they will have a contract with the hospital trust and it's those legal provisions that will contain certain allowances. One common model was that operators cover all the costs of the equipment install & maintenance, and in return prices were capped at a certain level - which may well be the figures you're seeing. Ofcom, the telecoms regulator, would require that call costs are clearly notified, but beyond that consumer choice takes over and individual users can decide whether to use that service or not.
Hospital mobile coverage is currently a hot topic, alongside in-building mobile coverage in general. Many trusts now have dedicated internal coverage systems with one or multiple mobile operators, others take the view that mobile networks have responsibility for coverage while they provide indoor WiFi instead.
If a particular hospital trust appears to take the view that provision of expensive bedside phones alongside WiFi, is a way of mitigating for poor indoor mobile coverage, then you may wish to take that up with the trust directly. Alongside using WiFi-calling to provide your own internal mobile service.
11-12-2025 09:58 AM
What are the 1st 6 digits of the number you called?