KFF Health News October 17, 2024
Michael Scaturro

When Lyft driver Tramaine Carr transports seniors and sick patients to hospitals in Atlanta, she feels like both a friend and a social worker.

“When the ride is an hour or an hour and a half of mostly freeway driving, people tend to tell you what they’re going through,” she said.

Drivers such as Carr have become a critical part of the medical transportation system in Georgia, as well as in Washington, D.C., Mississippi, Arizona, and elsewhere. While some patients use transportation companies solely dedicated to medical rides or nonemergency ambulance rides to get to their appointments, the San Francisco-based ride-hailing companies Uber and Lyft are also ferrying people to emergency rooms, kidney dialysis, cancer care, physical therapy, and other...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Patient / Consumer
Seniors deserve timely access to care, not bureaucratic hurdles | Viewpoint
From Noise To Clarity, Here’s An Empowering Way To Hearing Health
More than half of US adults could benefit from GLP-1 medications, researchers find
Data show 24.3% of U.S. adults had chronic pain in past three months in 2023
GLP-1 drug coverage for obesity making inroads with large employers: Mercer

Share This Article