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Transportation United States

Cities With Uber Have Lower Rates Of Ambulance Usage (npr.org) 165

An anonymous reader shares a report: Many potential emergency room patients are too sick to drive themselves to a hospital. But an ambulance can cost hundreds or thousands of dollars without insurance. This where a popular ride-sharing app can step in, while also freeing up the ambulances for those who need them most. With demand for ambulances decreased by available Uber drivers, emergency personnel have been able reach critical patients faster while also applying necessary treatment on the way to the hospital, according to a new economic study from the University of Kansas: "Given that even a reduction of a few minutes can drastically improve survival rates for serious conditions, this could be associated with a substantial welfare improvement." The study investigated ambulance rates in 766 U.S. cities from 43 different states. Taking into account the timelines of when Uber entered each city, the researchers found that the app reduced per capita ambulance usage rates by around 7 percent.
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Cities With Uber Have Lower Rates Of Ambulance Usage

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  • by bogaboga ( 793279 ) on Tuesday December 26, 2017 @09:50AM (#55808811)

    Uber must be rejoicing over this "free advertising."

    You see, when it comes to "ride sharing" all media talk about is "Uber," "Uber" and more "Uber."

    It's as if the other more than 10 ride sharing companies/services just do not exist!

    • It's as if the other more than 10 ride sharing companies/services just do not exist!

      People use "Uber" as a generic term, sort of like when you google using Bing, people also uber using Lyft.

      Free business advice: Don't use a common generic word as your company name. Even if you do something cute with the spelling, it will still sound awkward to say "I am going to lift a ride". If people don't say it, they don't think it, and if they don't think it, they don't use it. This mistake likely cost Lyft more business than their stupid pink mustaches (at least that was fixable).

    • Uber must be rejoicing over this "free advertising."

      You see, when it comes to "ride sharing" all media talk about is "Uber," "Uber" and more "Uber."

      It's as if the other more than 10 ride sharing companies/services just do not exist!

      Doesn't everyone know that Uber is the "kleenex" or "coke" of their respective market?

      meaning, it's a name brand that belies the actual choice made (Uber could mean "taxi" if that happens to be less friction - like ride from the airport).

  • Wow! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Tuesday December 26, 2017 @09:58AM (#55808869)

    "But an ambulance can cost hundreds or thousands of dollars without insurance. "

    I'm European and I can't believe my eyes.
    First, here _everybody_ is insured, even the bums living under a bridge.
    Second, an ambulance ride costs around 150$ if some uninsured foreigner ordered one.

    I guess you're doing it wrong.

    • well you need to pay for the deadbeats that just show up at the ER and don't pay. For some that is there only doctor other then the jail / prison ones that do cover stuff that the ER does not.

    • Second, an ambulance ride costs around 150$ if some uninsured foreigner ordered one.

      No. It costs much more than that. There is no way you can pay for for EMTs and equipment for $150 a ride.

      I'm not saying this because I oppose the idea that society should pay for healthcare. I am in favor of a strong social safety net. But a strong safety net doesn't magically make ambulance rides cost less by helping to pay for it.

    • Re:Wow! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Tuesday December 26, 2017 @02:11PM (#55810833)
      There's a company running commercials here called DealDash which advertises HDTVs for $10, laptops and tablets for $20. I was curious how they got prices that low so I investigated. It functions as an auction, kinda like eBay. Except you pay a transaction cost for every bid you make - roughly 75 cents per bid. So if a $300 TV comes up for auction and sells for $10 after 10 bid cycles, the winner will have paid $10 + 10*$0.75 = $17.50 for it. Sounds great, right?

      But if you look at the total cost to society, if 50 people made a grand total of 10 bids each on it trying to win that TV, the total cost to all of them to purchase that TV is actually $10 + 50*10*$0.75 = $385. And the company makes a tidy $85 profit even though the winner only paid $17.50 for a $300 TV.

      That's what you have to remember when you socialize costs. The price the individual user pays is only a fraction of the actual cost. The rest is distributed over society, paid for with your taxes. So the cost of your ambulance ride is actually $150 + whatever general tax revenue is needed to fund the system. (The price the uninsured foreigner pays is probably the marginal cost [wikipedia.org] - most of the fixed costs like purchasing the ambulance has already been paid for by your citizens, and the foreigner is only paying for a few minutes of the EMT's time and equipment depreciation, and the gas.)

      This is why the cost to operate an ICE vehicle isn't just the gas you buy put into it. It's the cost of the gas + the cost of the pollution caused by the emissions. Likewise, it's why EVs aren't zero emissions. All they do is displace the emissions to the power plant which generates the electricity they use. Which means if your electricity is mostly generated by coal, the overall EV efficiency (after factoring in generation, transmission, and charging losses) is about the same as for a gasoline vehicle.

      You have to look at the total cost of something to all of society, not just to the individual user or in an individual instance. You can criticize the U.S. for having 2x the health care costs of the OECD average. But criticizing it on the basis of a single ambulance ride cost to the end-user is naive.
      • Why do I have to look at the total cost? Or, to be more blunt, you're making a case that the ambulance ride is subsidized. To which the answer is... duh . It's subsidized because non-US countries decided that saving lives is the government's job.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        You are comparing a scam where people pay for nothing (a failed bid) to socialised healthcare where all taxes paid into the system result in some benefit for the payee.

        We know exactly what it costs, where the money comes from. We have endless debates about it. But the question is always "how much should web pay?", not "should we pay?" because when we need medical care we don't want to be checking our wallets first.

        And I'm not sure how you think insurance works, but that's the healthy subsiding the sick too

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by guruevi ( 827432 )

      Yeah, but you pay 55% income tax and 21% sales tax. The ambulances still have to run, still cost (more expensive) gas. So basically any foreigner that pays $150 is subsidized by you.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        I'm totally fine with that. Foreigners represent a tiny proportion of the users, and I'd rather the ambulance crew didn't have to check my ID and tax status before administering care.

        More over, I want foreigners to feel safe in my country, and to bring their tourism money here.

        • by guruevi ( 827432 )

          There has never been a case in the US where ambulances checked your ID and tax status before administering care.

          What did happen pre-Obamacare was they would take you to a hospital, treat you and then worry about your insurance/costs. If you had no insurance, then you would have to pay for it, which is why you choose not to pay for insurance after all, although pretty much everywhere you didn't have to if you were poor enough. Also, your medical debts couldn't be collected upon and would just sit there until

      • by Altrag ( 195300 )

        And in the US, every dollar your company pays for your corporate health insurance plan is a dollar they can't add to your paycheck.

        As with everything in life, you pay for it one way or another.

        • by Altrag ( 195300 )

          *Pre-Obamacare I mean, of course.. when your only real option for health insurance was through your workplace.

  • An ambulance ride can cost $1000 even if you have insurance.
  • Taxi licensing laws are killing children.
  • Community services a) are meant to be used; and b) get better, cheaper, and more effective the more we use them.

    This 7% signifies three things:

    1) that some people were calling for ambulances when they didn't need any medical care en-route to the hospital. Ambulances aren't taxis. These people should have been taking taxis or asking a neighbour to drive them. You don't need to pay a stranger to help you. You live with others.

    2) that there are some people calling uber when they should be calling an ambula

    • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

      Your ambulance doesn't cost $45. That $45 is just your "copay". The price is much more and you are paying for it in some fashion.

      You're just charged for it in a manner that makes it easier to kid yourself that it's free. You're the proverbial slowly boiled frog.

      • If I use an ambulance ten times a month, it'll cost me $450. If I use it zero times, it'll cost me $0.

        Nothing else is variable. My taxes are lower than yours -- I promise.

    • by Agripa ( 139780 )

      1) that some people were calling for ambulances when they didn't need any medical care en-route to the hospital. Ambulances aren't taxis. These people should have been taking taxis or asking a neighbour to drive them. You don't need to pay a stranger to help you. You live with others.

      2) that there are some people calling uber when they should be calling an ambulance. Medical issues can get worse en-route, especially with added delays and random things that can happen -- accidents, weather, traffic, jostling, tripping, indigestion, et cetera. Expert medical professionals are a good idea when there's already something seriously wrong with you (serious enough for a hospital visit) simply to ensure that nothing else happens to you also. Like my doctor says, once you're sick, you can still get another sickness too.

      So we should blame the people who lack medical degrees and are not licensed by the state to practice medicine for misdiagnosing their own condition? That makes as much sense as blaming people who rely on the expertise of banks to approve their home loans.

  • Since when is correlation causation?

    • by Altrag ( 195300 )

      Since journalists weren't scientists so.. basically always, assuming you only ever read the newspaper stories and don't care to dig into the actual papers and whatnot for yourself. It probably doesn't help that the major publishing organizations for research papers call themselves "journals," even though they have nothing to do with journalism in the newspaper sense of the word. I'm sure there's some historical reason for that but its certainly a bit weird by today's common usage of the words.

  • Would you want someone with a communicable disease in your back seat? Do you want to be the next passenger?
    • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

      > Would you want someone with a communicable disease in your back seat? Do you want to be the next passenger?

      We have Measles outbreaks at Disneyworld and Noro outbreaks on cruise ships. International airports are an international germ exchange. You have annual flu season. If you think you only have to worry about people going to the hospital, you're really kidding yourself.

    • Would you want someone with a communicable disease in your back seat?

      The vast majority of Ambulance patients do not have communicable diseases. They have things like severe sprains, fractures, maybe blood sugar problems, or any of the most of the other things that people can have affect their health which they are unable to pass on to others.

  • What about Lyft? When Uber is consuming all the oxygen, Lyft might be the only thing to keep some patients alive.
  • People used to use Taxi's for this same reason. Eventually Taxi's stopped taking fares to emergency rooms due to the liability they were exposed to. When Uber gets sued because someone dies on their way to the hospital expect this to end quickly.
  • Doesn't this scream out for some kind of service for non-life-threatening conditions that's significantly less capable (and cheaper) than our existing ones?

    I mean, I can understand why it's not socially optimal to send two trained EMTs and a ambulance full of cutting edge equipment for a caller that cut his hand while slicing a bagel [latimes.com] and needs to go to the ER for stitches. The caller isn't going to die in the next 2 hours (note: if the ER is busy they'll logically wait while more dire cases are handled firs

    • by Altrag ( 195300 )

      Trouble with that is that it then places the burden on the 911 operators to determine whether you need a "high capability" or "low capability" ambulance, and all they have to go on is whatever you tell them so there's a very high chance that they'll make the wrong call given that some people freak out over a hang nail while others have half a limb chopped off and think it'll be fine and finish whatever they were doing before they even bother calling.

      To some degree of course, the same argument could be made

      • But they already need to know that because they need to know whether to send a high capability ambulance right the fuck away or whether it might have to wait.

        The entire emergency medicine system is critically centered around triaging each patient in order to have a clear sense of priorities.

  • I've had to call 911 or Hospital emergency line a few times over the past several years (elder parent who's prone to issues + kid injuries). In most cases, they don't push you to get an ambulance. In one case, the ambulance arrived and said it'd be cheaper if we drove our daughter in (they took a look and determined it wasn't a critical injury), so that's what we did.

    Uber/Lyft/Taxi instead of ambulance makes a lot of sense if you've talked with the appropriate folks to make sure there isn't a need for bl

  • Uber don't operate within about 150 km of home. The nearest emergency room is about 2.5km away. Thoroughly useless.

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