PUBLISHED
SAT, OCT 26 201910:00 AM EDTUPDATED SAT, OCT 26 201912:00 PM EDT Lori Ioannou@LORIIOANNOU1
KEY POINTS
·
Heal is a
start-up that delivers doctor services to one’s home through an app and
provides all key medical tests.
·
It has raised $75
million in venture capital and attracted such celebrity backers as Lionel
Richie and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush.
·
This year the
company will make 100,000 house calls, forecasts CEO Nick Desai.
·
It is in major
markets such as New York, California, Georgia and Washington, D.C.
As the debate rages on in America about how to deliver
quality health care while coping with rising costs, insurance companies like
Aetna are turning to doctor services on demand. It’s a concept created by Heal,
a four-year-old tech start-up that has raised $75 million in venture capital
and is backed by such celebrities as Lionel Richie and former Florida Gov. Jeb
Bush.
The back-to-the-future model is simple: Doctor
services are delivered to a patient’s home on demand through an app. Users
input their personal medical details and credit card information and request a
doctor in their local area. “It’s like a concierge service for health care,”
says Lionel Richie, who invested in Heal at the company’s seed stage. “A
board-certified primary-care physician and medical assistant make a house call
within two hours of a request.”
The average visit lasts 30 minutes to one hour, and
Heal doctors come with a medical assistant and a host of portable testing
machinery to perform everything from an EKG, ultrasound and bone scan to blood
testing and allergy screening. They also get a firsthand look at the patient’s
living conditions and access to food and prescriptions they need to stay
healthy.
Unlike traditional doctors, Heal sends a
HIPAA-compliant summary of the services to patients within 24 hours. The price
for the house call for a patient without insurance: a flat fee of $159. For
those with private insurance: a co-pay varies by plan but is typically between
zero and $30. The cost for seniors on Medicare: zero, or a co-pay up to $20.
The goal is twofold: to provide home health care to a
growing population of seniors and underpriviledged communities, many of whom
find it difficult to visit doctors offices and health-care clinics; and to
lower medical and health-care costs. Often these sick patients resort to emergency-room
visits for urgent care that charge exorbitant fees.
Gov. Bush, who has invested in the company and joined
Heal’s board in 2018, believes this health-care model has great potential and
it could scale nationally. “There are managed-care companies interested in
partnering with Heal, and doctors love it. But scaling services in each market
will take time.”
Richie agrees. “It’s a concept for health care that is
so simple, so cost effective and so personal. Patients love the individualized
attention. Doctors love the fact they can practice medicine without all the
administrative paperwork and expense of operating an office or clinic,” he
says.
Heal has made strides to expand its reach in recent
months. It has grown revenues 310% over the past 12 months. In September it
acquired Doctors on Call in New
York City. Last year Doctors on Call made 42,000 house calls to seniors.
Currently, there are 100 certified physicians that work for Heal, and the
company serves patients in Atlanta, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Orange County,
San Diego, New York City, Sacramento, Washington, D.C., and northern Virginia.
It’s like a concierge
service for health care. Lionel Richie, Singer, Songwriter And Investor In Heal
Besides Aetna (which recently merged with CVS) 20
other private insurers are partnering with Heal, including Cigna, Humana and United Healthcare. So are
some Medicare Advantage plans. “The whole industry is looking for better value
outcomes for patients,” says Nick Desai, co-founder and CEO. As he explains, up
until Dec. 31, 2018 Medicare didn’t allow house calls but changed the rule for
its population. This gives seniors on Medicare access to Heal’s service.
According to Frank Ulibarri, market president of Aetna who oversees operations in Georgia, Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi, his company invited Heal to serve its Greater Atlanta members in January after investigating a number of mobile medicine providers. “This is a great test market with thousands of members that could benefit from this service,” he explains. Aetna liked Heal’s model. “It’s a great way of rendering care,” says Ulibarri.
According to Frank Ulibarri, market president of Aetna who oversees operations in Georgia, Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi, his company invited Heal to serve its Greater Atlanta members in January after investigating a number of mobile medicine providers. “This is a great test market with thousands of members that could benefit from this service,” he explains. Aetna liked Heal’s model. “It’s a great way of rendering care,” says Ulibarri.
“It’s simple and efficient and provides great insight
you cannot get in an office setting.“Just as important, it can improve patient
compliance and drive cost savings by keeping people healthier by monitoring
them more closely and cutting the high cost of emergency visits.
The company plans to expand the service to other
communities, such as Gainsville, Georgia, in the months ahead. “Our goal is to
make health care more personable and convenient. We want to provide services
closer to the consumer. We think it’s a trend in health care that will continue
and gain momentum.”
According to Desai, in 2019 Heal will perform more
than 100,000 house calls, averaging $53.7 million per year in overall
health-care savings. “There are currently 120 American Board-certified
physicians in the network across its markets. That number should double over
the next 12 months,” he says.
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