Amazon Offers $49 Telehealth Urgent Care Visits

Amazon has reorganized its medical services options.

The company combined its Amazon Clinic telehealth service with its Amazon One Medical office network.

Consumers with no Amazon membership or subscription can get telehealth urgent care for one of the 30 different conditions, including sore throats, COVID and urinary tract infections, for $49. The company has renamed that service Amazon One Medical Pay-per-visit.

Consumers who pay $199 for a membership can get both telehealth urgent care and fast access to in-person medical appointments, the company says. The medical offices have signed provider network agreements with many insurers, including Aetna, Anthem, Cigna, Humana and UnitedHealthcare. Amazon did not say how much they will charge the insurers.

The care providers include physician assistants and nurse practitioners along with doctors of medicine and osteopathic medicine.

For Amazon Prime members, an annual health program membership is $99 per year. The company announced the $99 annual subscription price for Prime members last fall.

The $49 fee Amazon will charge for a telehealth visit without a membership appears to be comparable to what companies like GoodRx charge.

Amazon is expanding its telehealth services and highlighting its in-person offices as some other large companies, including Walmart, are cutting clinic operations.

Amazon notes that the telehealth service has tight limitations on what it can do and may require patients to come in for tests and other services. The company doesn’t want to provide care for earaches or for patients who have had a fever over 103 degrees for an extended period.

The program is not open to people with Medicaid in most jurisdictions, but Amazon is offering financial assistance to low-income members, including low-income members with high-deductible insurance who want an annual membership.

The company is encouraging employers to offer it to employees and Medicare agents to offer it to their clients.

People can give Amazon health program memberships as gifts.

 

Source Link

Recommended Articles

New NFIB Survey: Small Businesses Report Reduced Optimism

The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index fell 0.6 points in May to 95.3, remaining below its 52-year average of 98.0. The Uncertainty Index rose 3 points from April to 91, remaining well above its historical average of 68. As reported in NFIB’s monthly Jobs Report, the NFIB Small Business Employment Index remained essentially flat, registering 100.3 in May. ...

Read More

Trump Announces TrumpRx Expansion, Adding 160 More Drugs

President Trump on Friday announced that over 100 prescription medications would be added to his administration’s direct-to-consumer drug platform, TrumpRx, the second expansion of the initiative in as many months. “I am pleased to announce that TrumpRx.gov is adding another 160 Prescription Drugs, at highly discounted prices, for a new total of over 800 of the most commonly-used Prescription Drugs,” ...

Read More

Skyrocketing GLP-1 Demand Creates Major Financial Strain For Employers

GLP-1 drugs are a double-edged sword for the nation’s employers. Although they are having a demonstrable effect on workplace health, the high cost is putting a strain on their budgets. GLP-1s, known by brand names such as Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro or Zepbound, originally were developed to help regulate blood sugar in people with Type 2 ...

Read More

Judge Throws Out Policy Imposing $100,000 Fees for Skilled Worker Visas

A Trump administration initiative to impose $100,000 fees on employers seeking visas for skilled foreign workers amounts to an unlawful tax on those companies and must be voided “in its entirety,” a federal judge ruled on Monday. The decision by Judge Leo T. Sorokin of the Federal District Court for the District of Massachusetts nullified ...

Read More
arrowcaret-downclosefacebook-squarehamburgerinstagram-squarelinkedin-squarepauseplaytwitter-squareyoutube-square