(Bloomberg Business) — Julie Moss, a a program-scheduling director at HBO, had an appointment for a checkup. But instead of hailing cabs and waiting in a doctor's office, she had the doctor come to her.
Actually, a nurse practitioner. She set up a makeshift medical station in Moss's New York office, laying out a bandage, needles, gauze, and other doctorly contraptions on a disposable sheet on a table next to the couch. She began with a finger prick for a cholesterol check.
The phone rang. Moss, now with a bandage on her index finger, trotted over to take it. It was her boss. While they chatted and scheduled a few meetings, the nurse practitioner ran the blood sample through a reader. After the call, Moss had her blood pressure, temperature, and other vitals checked. The appointment took less than half an hour and would have cost $75, if not for the current promotion that made it free.
Moss, 37, had coordinated the visit through an app called Pager, a sort of Uber for doctors, or Seamless for sick workers, or pick your startup analogy. Pager, based in New York, launched a little over a year ago as a modern twist on the old-fashioned house call. Instead of sitting in the emergency room or scheduling a far-off visit to the doctor, busy ailing people can tap their phone and get doctors and nurses affiliated with major New York City health systems to their door in two hours or less. Most people use the app for in-home care, but Pager says it has seen thousands of workplace users. Similar services, such as Heal and Go2Nurse, are available in Los Angeles and Chicago, respectively.
"You have a condition, infection, a minor injury, you're in pain, you're in stress — you push a button and a doctor comes to you within an hour," said Gaspard de Dreuzy, Pager's 39-year-old CEO. Prices range from $50 for a phone consultation to $200 for an urgent-care in-person visit. The app doesn't accept insurance yet, although Pager says that's coming soon. For now, the service can be billed as an out-of-network provider.
When employees don't go to the doctor because it's inconvenient, they risk getting sicker, which is more inconvenient than going to the doctor. From a boss's perspective, that means more time away from work recuperating, and high medical bills that increase insurance costs. Flu season alone costs U.S. employers $10.4 billion in hospitalization and outpatient visits, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That doesn't include productivity losses from illness, which cost the U.S. economy $227 billion a year, according to a 2012 study from the Integrated Benefits Institute.
In fact, Moss, who has a toddler at home, hadn't been to her internist in years, until she had a stroke this year that knocked her out of work for months.
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She has since made almost a full recovery and is back at HBO. Now she schedules regular doctor's appointments.