The health secretary "would not be doing his job" if he did not ring hospital bosses who miss A&E targets, the Department of Health has said.
It comes after David Prior, chairman of the Care Quality Commission (CQC), told the Daily Telegraph it was "crazy" for Jeremy Hunt to take that action.
Mr Prior also branded targets "hugely distortive" but Mr Hunt's spokesman said patients needed guarantees.
Labour defended the use of targets, brought in while it was in power.
Shadow health minister Jamie Reed said the targets had cut waiting lists and increased patient satisfaction.
'Held accountable'In the interview, Mr Prior, the head of the health regulator the CQC criticised Mr Hunt for directly calling hospital chief executives, saying: "There is an obsession. It's crazy to have a secretary of state doing that."
"Of course he's doing it, because he's held accountable but what it all leads to is more money being put into A&E departments when that money should probably be put into primary and community care to stop people falling ill," he added.
The former Tory MP and deputy party chairman also voiced concern over targets.
"The whole culture of the NHS became so focused on targets that it obscured what real quality was about. The voice of the patient wasn't in those targets," he said.
Mr Prior said that when patients arrived in A&E "the clock starts ticking and not a lot happens".
"At three hours people start to get interested - and at three hours 55 minutes the chief executive is down in the A&E department. That doesn't make any sense," he said.
Mr Prior said he felt the NHS "became too powerful to criticise" despite many patients receiving a "wholly unsatisfactory" service.
"When things were going wrong people didn't say anything. If you criticised the NHS - the attitude was 'how dare you?'" he said.
"No organisation should be put on such a high pedestal that it is beyond criticism. Now it is getting more honest about our failings - which I think makes it more likely that we will address them."
Mr Prior described a "chillingly defensive" culture in which even the most "alpha-male surgeons" felt frightened to speak out for fear of ending their careers.
"When you are compared to a national religion, that is the problem," he said in reference to a description of the NHS by Lord Lawson.
He said the emergency care system should be a priority for change and it was "wholly unsatisfactory" that so many patients struggled to get an appointment with their GP.
He said: "Their opening times have to be geared around the patients."
Missed targetsA spokesman for Mr Hunt said some targets, including those for A&E waiting times, had been relaxed and others scrapped since the coalition came to power.
However, he said there was a "balance" to be struck because the public needed guarantees that they would be treated quickly.
The spokesman also defended the performance of A&E units, saying they were "holding up well" and more people than ever before were being seen within four hours.
Labour has defended the use of targets in the NHS saying they had cut waiting lists and increased patient satisfaction.
Shadow health minister Jamie Reed MP said: "In 1997 people were waiting for months and years to be seen and receive treatment, but by 2010 targets had helped to deliver the lowest ever waiting lists and patient satisfaction was at a record high. That is why this government has continued to use targets.
"The focus now needs to be on the winter crisis engulfing A&E. When Labour left office 98% of patients were seen within four hours, but the government continues to miss it's own lowered A&E target."
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