Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Can ride-hailing companies cure medical transporta­tion woes?

- By Tom Murphy

Lyft and Uber are attempting to cure a major medical problem for poor people and the elderly: Getting a ride to the doctor.

The ride-hailing services are expanding their offer to take patients around the country to and from nonemergen­cy health care appointmen­ts, and they have a huge market to target.

More than 7 million Americans miss medical care every year due to a lack of transporta­tion, according to health economist Paul Hughes-Cromwick.

Health insurers and care providers have been trying to solve this problem for years. Those who have studied it say Lyft and Uber will help, but improving access to health care involves more than just lining up a ride.

A closer look:

: What are these offering?

companies

: Lyft said Monday it is partnering with the informatio­n technology company Allscripts to expand the number of rides it offers through doctor’s offices and other health care providers. The company already provides transporta­tion to millions of patients each year through partnershi­ps with insurers, large health care systems and others.

Uber announced last week that it will offer health care transporta­tion in every U.S. market where it operates, the continuati­on of a venture it has been testing since last summer.

Both companies say they will operate in cities and less-populated rural areas, and they will bill the care provider or an insurer — not the patient — for the rides. Patients don’t need a smartphone or an applicatio­n to use their services.

They’re digging into an issue that has long been a concern for insurers and health care providers. The state- and federally funded Medicaid program for poor people and the disabled covers transporta­tion costs.

The insurer Molina Healthcare, which specialize­s in Medicaid, has offered a transporta­tion benefit for around 25 years. Molina provides bus passes and works with transporta­tion brokers to arrange rides. : What are the benefits?

: Health care providers say rides with Uber or Lyft can be easier to schedule and cheaper than other alternativ­es like taxis. Uber, for instance, says it can schedule rides within a few hours or up to 30 days in advance. These companies help people who might otherwise have to wait around for a friend or family member to pick them up, said Carlos Ospina, chief clinical officer of New Jersey-based Pro Staff Physical Therapy.

“It gives the patient more independen­ce or power to get to and from visits,” he said.

The company has had a “significan­tly lower” number of cancellati­ons due to transporta­tion problems since it started using Uber last fall, Ospina said.

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 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this file photo, a Lyft logo is installed on a Lyft driver’s car next to an Uber sticker in Pittsburgh. Lyft and Uber are expanding deeper into health care by offering to take more patients to and from non-emergency medical appointmen­ts in markets...
GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this file photo, a Lyft logo is installed on a Lyft driver’s car next to an Uber sticker in Pittsburgh. Lyft and Uber are expanding deeper into health care by offering to take more patients to and from non-emergency medical appointmen­ts in markets...

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