Today the Push Health team would like to talk about one of the things that our team has been most passionate about – healthcare. Specifically, we’re going to be talking about the future of healthcare and how it might impact you as a consumer and as a patient – because it’s important to us that you know how important this topic is to us.
Push Health for Patients:
The Push Health provides a unique opportunity for patients to tap into specialized medical expertise when and where they need it. Push Health is not simply an urgent care or virtual walk-in clinic. It’s a new way for primary care physicians to enhance patient well-being, often resolving issues that could have resulted in an expensive, lengthy and inconvenient hospital stay or even unnecessary surgery.
Appointments move quickly too. So instead of wasting time sitting around in an exam room waiting for your doctor or even having him walk you back, you get your vital signs taken electronically at home by health professionals like lab technicians, pharmacists and exercise physiologists before seeing a physician who can spend more time focusing on what really matters.
No animals biting at your feet while you’re trying to work. Health Just a great conversation with an awesome human being who cares about his craft and gets results. And it doesn’t matter if your issue has been going on for days, weeks or years.
What counts is whether there’s something we can do today that will help improve your life even if only temporarily until you’re ready to make some major lifestyle changes tomorrow. Or maybe next week or next month and maybe forever? But let’s cross that bridge together once we get to it.
We do background checks on all providers who pass muster based on credentials, experience level and adherence to best practices such as how they consult with other health practitioners should treatment plans require multiple areas of focus such as nutrition counseling or physical therapy.
Push Health insurance:
Telemedicine offers patients more independence, convenience and flexible healthcare options. However, once insurance companies catch on to how much money they’re losing, Health will no longer be able to compete with local doctors’ offices. There are some things that can be done from a regulatory perspective to slow down these efforts.
Let’s first outline some key points around telemedicine it helps treat chronic conditions that require regular monitoring; it saves costs by avoiding expensive in-person doctor visits; most consumers would prefer online video appointments over traditional phone calls; but there is still enormous pushback from both insurance providers and professional organizations like state medical boards.
This debate has evolved for decades without significant progress because telemedicine has been wrongly framed as an issue about whether or not a physician should be present during an online consultation. Push Health Yet, even if we could ban virtual consultations, concierge medicine would continue thriving under new forms of delivery such as IP-only services.
Health constantly improving and AI making large strides, our only hope is regulation through intervention by lawmakers. After all, what makes us think insurers want to pay $10 per month when they could just eliminate coverage altogether? It’s time to recognize that convenience trumps any theoretical benefit of in-person care. We know everyone wants better health care…why don’t we offer them something radically different? If you’re trying to find ways to promote wellness and get people exercising,
Who owns Push Health:
A physician based in Pennsylvania, Dr. Michael Karol is both founder and CEO of Health. And he’s not stopping at medicine for doctors he’s also leading his team to develop solutions that enable healthcare workers to work more efficiently with patients, each other and providers from all over the world.
Put simply, Karol understands that access is only half of what matters—and quality is equally important. He believes medicine has tremendous potential because it can revolutionize how care is delivered throughout entire cities, but also on a smaller scale. For example, in 2015, his company launched In-Home Medical Services (HIMS), which provides patients who are home bound with 24/7 video visits from medical professionals.
Health Karol founded HIMS after noticing there was no option for people who needed emergency medical attention but couldn’t leave their homes. Additionally, he was concerned about cases where poor CIC health compromised a patient’s ability to communicate due to cognitive or speech impairments. With HIMS, these cases would be addressed effectively via video and come equipped with audio capabilities so that staff could listen carefully for cues even if their eyes weren’t on them.
This service is currently available in New York City; however, we hope it soon expands into other regions as well. Once you have great, useful software, getting it out into users’ hands quickly and reliably is an obvious priority. Thus, delivering apps through app stores makes a lot of sense – but today’s app stores fall short when attempting to certify apps.