N.Y. Health Insurers To Offer Virtual Doc Visits 74
CWmike writes "Two insurance organizations in upstate New York said on Wednesday that they will offer their members and employers virtual physician visits beginning this summer, making New York the fourth state to provide these types of services. BlueCross BlueShield of Western New York, BlueShield of Northeastern New York and technology services provider American Well said the Online Care service will allow members to talk with physicians in real time through a private online chat network or through a voice-over-IP phone call. The service also offers video chat and instant messages. Members can sign on to the insurer's Web sites and look for physicians who are available online in various specialty areas."
Coming next: (Score:4, Insightful)
Outsourcing doctors offshore.
Is the insurance fee virtual too? (Score:1, Insightful)
I thought not.
Conflict of interest (Score:2, Insightful)
First-contact doctors working directly for the insurance company sounds like a bit of a conflict of interest.
Even if you trust in them not to be simply bought off, their jobs may depend on how much their instructions cost. Dr Caring who believes suspect lumps should be biopsyed every time just to make sure they aren't cancerous is unlikely to have as long a term with the company as Dr Casual who tells the patients to just wait two weeks and see if it goes away on it's own.
Just wait until they outsource it... (Score:3, Insightful)
The danger for misdiagnosis is huge, although they no doubt have a clause somewhere about it - they may just end up telling patients to visit their doctor in person for a proper check-up, which kind of defeats the object.
all well and good... (Score:2, Insightful)
but also a waste of time in a lot of cases. Case in point, my in-laws, who go to the doctor if they stub their toes.
I'm only slightly exaggerating, any little thing and off they go. It's unreal. If they knew about this, I'm sure they'd have a lot more "afflictions" to get "treated" by these doctors.
Sad.
Re:Standard Fee (Score:3, Insightful)
Most likely none. You will still have to pay your $20 co-pay or pay up until you meet the deductible full charge. The insurance company however will have reduced rates for these types of service provided by their doctors. So they will be billed less ($100 instead of $500) and they will be able to generate more money. Next thing they're going to start staffing their own 'doctors' (probably med students that just finished school) on an hourly rate with a 6 months turnover (so they won't have to provide benefits) and later some manager is going to find out that doctors in India charge 300 rupees instead of 300 dollars per visit.
Re:Coming next: (Score:5, Insightful)
Good Lord, why should be it cheaper? There is equipment to be paid for and technicians to make sure the equipment is operational; probably some extra coverage for "e-Malpractice". Of course you won't actually get to see a doctor, just another over-worked nurse practitioner; only now they'll have to sit in a cube for 9 hours a day.
Turn-over will begin to go up in that area as the whole thing turns into "medical help desk". I couldn't imagine the horror of getting pestered for 9 hours a day by octogenarians and hypochondriacs about every pimple and scratch on their body. Not that it matters, the practice bills by both the call and the minute, there are 40 people in que and your sup is complaining about your response times. You pray each day that your practice will get bought out by one of the big boy managed health organizations, because they actually put into your 401k, unlike these organ grinders.
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Coming next: (Score:3, Insightful)
You have unemployed doctors? In my country (Portugal) it's very hard to get an MD degree, and getting one is like a licence to print money.
But our system costs a huge lot less [wikipedia.org], and the coverage is universal. Someone is being ripped off.
So, where does all that money go? I guess to the middle man (insurance and healthcare corporations).
Just another way to increase profits (Score:4, Insightful)
How is this any better than a phone call?
The doctor still can't palpate anythying, nor even make a good visual examination since the quality is likely too poor to be of any use.
Answer? It's cheaper for the insurance company than a real doctor visit, and so saves them money, and you get inferior care for it, while they get increased profits.
Don't let them spin this as something good for you, it's just another way to reduce costs (and this time, care quality too).