If I could find an old princess phone (just pick up and hang up) and get a cell phone line (eliminates most telemarketers) hooked up to it somehow, then I could call and check on her every day. She can't manage much more than picking it up to answer. Can't dial a number. I want to stay in touch, and I live far away. She is living in her home with caregivers (single grandsons).
But, back to telemarketers calls -- IMHO, I think the only viable answer is We the People MUST take action that our elected reps legislators MUST do something serious & drastic to STOP this prolific invasion of our home phones. It's having a profound effect on friendships, families, etc., all who simply live by their Caller ID's... and even get discriminatory about which friends/family legitimate people they opt to answer for. A civil society doesn't need that!
Take care,
Carol
It doesn't matter what phone you have, as for robo calls, the telemarketers are pegging ALL phones, they robo calls just go digit by digit hitting ALL phones.
And, we know that the DNC (Do Not Call) list does NOT work.
This is why I say, we need legislators to really fix the problem, once & for all.
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Phones with large numbers are for blind, not deaf.
And, many OTC phones have adjusted volume -- albeit anemic negligible audio difference.
However, getting an unlisted number and getting on the DoNotCall list (and don't forget that needs to be periodically renewed) is a start.
Here's what I'm wondering and I'm just asking if anyone knows how to do this but:
In e-mail, we can whitelist people where we can insist that we only allow e-mail from certain people. On phones, we normally do the opposite where we block those numbers we don't want. I have to wonder if there's a way to use one of the VOIP services like e-mail, where you tell just which numbers you will allow? I'm not saying there is, just putting that out to think about.
With that said, I wonder if there's a way to do that with something like Skype? And, then, can you somehow how that up through a line to a princess phone?
I have seen those princess phone handsets to attach to cell phones, for those people who can't speak/hear on a cellphone, but I don't know that that's going to work -- am just mentioning it in case it could somehow work into this strategy.
I know Telemarketers are working a job but I hate them. They do invade your home and privacy. They now say "Hi I called you about a year ago and you told me you didn't need any work done, but to call you back again so I am calling you to see if you need anything done now!" I get so angry because that is a lie but it is their way of getting around the rules set up by the government. If you give them permission to call you they can, if you have ever had work done by them or even have an account at their store, they can call you. I even have people call to speak to John or say they are returning his call, when he has been dead for almost 9 years.
I never found a phone that stopped their calls. It does make me wonder if you were connected on one of those lines through the internet would that work? There use to be a box that you bought and connected the phone through it and if a telemarketer called it could tell if it was computer generated and it would disconnect the call. Mine stopped working and I never found another one.
Best wishes to you on this!!
Here is my advice and this has worked for me:
Within the first few weeks of owning the new number, you will usually find out if you have gotten a number that is going to get active collection calls. As soon as you realize this, immediately contact customer support for the phone service you are using, tell them the problem, and insist you get a new number.
Then, they will tell you that you have to pay a fee. However, I have been extremely insistent that it is wrong to recycle so active a number and that I deserve a new number and should not have to pay and, every time, have gotten my way. I do this when I'm willing to really spend the time on the phone to talk to supervisors and just not give in, but I've done it.
Otherwise you have received many good ideas about what kind of phones and systems are now available for the family of dementia patients. It seems only a few years ago (well, she passed away in May 2009 at age 100 so yes it was more than a few years) we couldn't work anything out with the NH so we could say even a few words to my Grandmother. There was a phone in the room but the NH never made any staff available to hold it to her ear. It was very upsetting. Good luck to you!
At home I have a landline, unlisted, and am on the Do Not Call List, I still get calls.... annoying ones that start out "HELLO SENIORS" selling medical alert type systems which are canned calls coming from all different telephone numbers so you can't trace it down to one number to complain to the FCC about a caller.