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originally posted by: DontTreadOnMe
a reply to: StoutBroux
But if you are sick, or your kids are sick, and you are told the next appointment at your alleged Primary Care is in two weeks, and Amazon offers talking to a doctor within an hour.....well....
originally posted by: DontTreadOnMe
a reply to: StoutBroux
Yeah.
Hate Amazon all you want.
But if you are sick, or your kids are sick, and you are told the next appointment at your alleged Primary Care is in two weeks, and Amazon offers talking to a doctor within an hour.....well....
No contest IMHO.
originally posted by: tanstaafl
originally posted by: DontTreadOnMe
a reply to: StoutBroux
But if you are sick, or your kids are sick, and you are told the next appointment at your alleged Primary Care is in two weeks, and Amazon offers talking to a doctor within an hour.....well....
Why would anyone need to talk to a Doctor just because they are sick? That is the dumbest thing I've ever heard.
originally posted by: strongfp
a reply to: DontTreadOnMe
Hate it for being invasive or thinking it's infringing on personal space telehealth / telemedicine is the future and since Amazon is heavily into cloud based technology this is a good way to get ahead of the curve.
Soon they will probably be offering cheaper biometrics and such.
As for the skeptical side of me, I'm wondering where's the profit incentive here. How is the normal person going to benefit from this beyond just faster appointments and being able to read my blood sugar on my phone or something. How will this affect places where health care is built into society like most European nations or here in Canada.
originally posted by: JAGStorm
a reply to: tanstaafl
There are numerous reasons, I’ll give you some examples.
Your kid has a UTI and needs a prescription
You ran out of medication and need to talk to your doctor first
You have something (like eczema) and had a flare up that you haven’t had in years, but want to try your old medication
You want to try acne medication
There are many things that don’t really need an in person visit, but a video call would suffice.
Of course this shouldn’t be used with anything of a serious nature.
originally posted by: strongfp
a reply to: DontTreadOnMe
Hate it for being invasive or thinking it's infringing on personal space telehealth / telemedicine is the future and since Amazon is heavily into cloud based technology this is a good way to get ahead of the curve.
Soon they will probably be offering cheaper biometrics and such.
As for the skeptical side of me, I'm wondering where's the profit incentive here. How is the normal person going to benefit from this beyond just faster appointments and being able to read my blood sugar on my phone or something. How will this affect places where health care is built into society like most European nations or here in Canada.