Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Amazon to expand telehealth services

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Amazon.com is expanding digital medical consultati­ons to its employees across the U.S. and says it will start offering the service to other companies.

Together with the launch of an online pharmacy in December, the initiative marks Amazon’s entry into the gargantuan U.S. health care industry. Medical services have long been seen as a target for Amazon, both to reduce the costs of caring for the e-commerce giant’s fastgrowin­g workforce and as a potential source of revenue in an area some say is ripe for digital transforma­tion.

Amazon Care started in 2019 as a pilot for employees in and around the company’s Seattle headquarte­rs, offering virtual and, in some cases, in-person medical services. As of Wednesday, Amazon started offering the program to other Washington­based companies, Amazon said in a blog post. Beginning this summer, the company will expand Amazon Care to the rest of its workers in the U.S., as well as other companies.

“Extending care to other companies as a workplace benefit is a necessary part of Amazon’s quest to expand in health care, and it may be an early sign that it intends to develop related services over time,” Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Poonam Goyal said in a note. “It will also help Amazon compete indirectly against retail clinics, where rivals like Walmart, Target, Kroger, CVS and Walgreens are expanding.”

Amazon has various health care initiative­s underway. Late last year, the company launched online pharmacy services in the U.S. under its own brand, building on PillPack, a mail- distributi­on pharmacy Amazon had acquired. The company also sells office equipment and some medical supplies to hospitals and clinics through its Amazon Business commercial sales program.

Amazon is known for launching experiment­s, only to abandon them later. That’s what happened with its first big health care endeavor, a joint venture with Berkshire Hathaway Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. to explore novel ways to reduce health care costs. In January, the trio said they were shutting down the operation and would distribute its expertise among the venture’s backers.

And there is reason to be skeptical of Amazon’s ability to lure other companies to Amazon Care.

In December, Insider reported that the company had pitched the service to other companies, including Zillow Group Inc. A Zillow spokespers­on at the time confirmed Amazon’s outreach but said the Seattle-based real estate company had no plans to use the service. An Amazon spokespers­on didn’t immediatel­y say Wednesday whether Amazon Care had signed any corporate customers.

Amazon Care offers consultati­ons, facilitate­d through a smartphone app, 24 hours a day. The company provides access to a range of urgent and primary care services, from COVID-19 testing to flu shots and prescripti­on requests. The service, which is provided for Amazon by Care Medical, an office that exclusivel­y works with Amazon, already includes the option of in-person visits to patients’ homes in the Seattle area.

It’s unclear how widely Amazon will offer physical visits. In Wednesday’s blog post, Amazon said in-person service would expand to Washington D.C., Baltimore and “other cities in the coming months.”

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