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dimanche 10 juillet 2016

I tried an app that lets you video-chat with a doctor — and it was the best health care experience I've ever had

MavenClinic

If you've ever suddenly come down with a deeply uncomfortable ailment like strep throat or a urinary tract infection, you likely have two immediate thoughts: "I know exactly what this is and how I need to treat it" and "How am I going to get in to see a doctor right away?"

Enter Maven, a women's health app that connects you with doctors via video chat, allowing you to ask questions, get advice and receive prescriptions. It costs $35 per session, but first-time users can get a discount code which brings that cost down to $10. 

Maven was founded by Kate Ryder, who came up with the idea for the app when she was working at a venture capital fund in London. Ryder noticed that all of her friends were starting to get pregnant and were receiving a lot of misinformation or having trouble finding the right doctor. 

"Health care is such a female-dominated market, but there are so few products that actually help women through a lot of these issues," Ryder told Business Insider.

Ryder said she thinks there's a lot of grey area in women's health and a lot of issues that are female-specific, like side effects from birth control or options for those who have trouble getting pregnant. 

"As a result, I think health care is a very different experience for a woman than a man," Ryder said. "It requires trust with the health care provider and more of a relationship-based model than a commodified model."

I tried Maven myself a few days ago, simply because I needed it: I just moved to a new city, I haven't had time to find a doctor (better yet make an appointment) and a prescription I take every day had just run out. I was desperate. 

I have to admit, I was skeptical of the service up until the moment a doctor appeared on my screen. It seemed too good to be true and I was worried that the doctors wouldn't be legitimate, despite having researched mine to death. How could I only be paying $10 for an appointment? How could she legally prescribe me medication? 

But in the end, it was one of the best health care experiences I've had in a while. 

Here's how it went:

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Signing up for Maven was pretty straightforward. The app is free to download and it was easy to set up an account.



Next I started the process for booking an appointment, which requires you, like most doctor visits, to give a reason for needing an appointment.



I then scrolled through a list of available practitioners, which included a few OB/GYNs and general practitioners, and six or seven nurse practitioners.

This wasn't the practitioner I chose, but there are plenty of both male and female health care workers on the app. I was able to read each of their bios, which list qualifications, experience, education and a few professional references.

Ryder said that in the beginning, Maven's staff was finding doctors on LinkedIn and through insurance companies and sending them postcards inviting them to join, even though the app didn't exist yet. 

"We give them tests, we give them case studies, we do reference checks, we do interviews," Ryder said. "They were allowing us to do all that even though they didn’t know anything about us in the beginning."

 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider


from Tech http://read.bi/29vLUFm

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