Uber, Lyft busy chasing healthcare market sans smartphone
Both San Francisco companies are looking to serve patients who need non-emergency medical transportation but may not necessarily own smartphones and/or be Uber and Lyft riders.
Both San Francisco companies are looking to serve patients who need non-emergency medical transportation but may not necessarily own smartphones and/or be Uber and Lyft riders.
In a study published Tuesday in JAMA, Anthem subsidiary CareMore Health Plan demonstrated how it collaborated with the ride service Lyft to reduce patient waiting times by 30 percent and cut per-ride costs by 32.4 percent.