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How home-based care is changing the face of the health sector

Reading the news on Amazon taking on Teladoc, CVS and Walgreens with Amazon Care, I can’t help but recall one of Amazon’s most successful failures: Haven. Less than ten months ago, this healthcare venture that Amazon was involved in was disbanded. It was surprising because this was such a high profile partnership between JP Morgan Chase, Berkshire Hathaway and Amazon.

The disbanding of Haven seemed to demonstrate how complex and difficult it was to disrupt the US healthcare system.

Amazon is now making a comeback with Amazon Care, which provides users a hassle-free way to see a licensed doctor or nurse. Users can connect with care providers via chat or video and schedule an in-person visit or medication delivery when necessary.

As I read the article, two thoughts came to mind:

  • Nothing is wasted on Amazon; no experiments or investments are “bad”, as it is common for seemingly “bad or failed” projects to have a second wind.
  • The Amazon Care project could indicate that home-based care will gain momentum globally.

Nothing is wasted on Amazon

The Inc pointed to the FirePhone as Amazon’s most significant failure as sales failed to pick up even when it was sold for 99-cents when bundled with a contract. Yet, this “failed” project led to an even bigger breakthrough, that of Alexa, which has become a convenient voice assistant that many homes worldwide can’t do without. The FirePhone was just one example of a failure turned successful (re)deployment at Amazon.

Also Read: Is blockchain the future of medicine in creating more secure healthcare?

Home-based care gaining momentum

This led me to consider Vertex Ventures Southeast Asia & India’s (“Vertex”) portfolio, Speedoc. Speedoc is a virtual clinic and healthcare solutions platform that allows users to seek medical care and services from home.

Since its inception in Singapore in 2017, Speedoc has had a presence in five cities in Singapore and Malaysia. It had completed more than 110,000 visits and served more than 75,000 patients. There are 200 healthcare providers (and counting) who are serving the needs of the patients on the Speedoc platform.

  • June 2020, Heal raised US$100 million from Humana for the At-Home Care model.
  • Mar 2021, Dispatch Health raised US$200 million, led by Tiger and Humana, to scale up its in-home medical care;
  • June 2021, Medically Home raised more than US$100 million, led by Kaiser Permanente and an additional US$110 million before the year ended, led by Baxter International Inc. “Medically Home’s model is to unlock patients’ homes as safe alternative sites to receive high and lower acuity care across the care continuum in the comfort and convenience of their homes”.
  • This month (Feb 2022), we read Amazon’s entry into the home health market.

What are Speedoc’s plans for the home-based care space?

Does Speedoc and its home-based care service fit the characteristics of a “dreamy” business? The following are some considerations:

  • Will customers love it? H-Ward is way more acceptable

Hospital visitation is not the same after COVID-19. Hospitals used to be livelier places where families and friends would drop by and visit patients with home-cooked food, flowers, fruit baskets, etc.

Also Read: Modern solutions to modern problems: How Plusman LLC innovates healthcare

During the COVID-19 period, visitations were controlled. When the number of COVID cases rose, the hospitals (in Singapore) reduced patients to having two unique visitors per day and within time limits. The inconvenience was the lesser of the evil. Patients and their families experienced much more anxiety and stress than before.

Patients were left on their own after the visits. They also could no longer pace around the wards as freely as before, hence confined to a small space for hours due to movement control. Could such stress retard patients’ recovery process (physically, mentally and emotionally)?

A recent study showed that for COVID-19 isolation, home isolation is superior to centralised isolation in the recovery of COVID-19 associated depression, anxiety and self-rated health. Patients seemed to recover better despite being in isolation, so long as they were in their homes.

Similarly, with the select group of patients under the H-Ward® program, Speedoc noticed that patients were generally happier, recovered better, and their families were less stressed.

In due time, Speedoc will roll out H-Ward® to cover more conditions. Will this be a preferred recovery option for patients if given a choice? After two years of working from home and having our lives revolve around our homes, I believe we will embrace the H-Ward® option well before the next pandemic hits us.

Also Read: What telemedicine and Health Tech holds across SEA amidst COVID-19.

  • The proliferation of increasingly reliable and sophisticated wearables like the Apple Watch that can track a variety of vital stats and transmit needed information to the healthcare professionals
  • Beyond vital stats, wearables can also monitor and analyse patients’ movements, allowing them to perform therapeutic exercises and recover at home.
  • Miniaturization of large hospital equipment such as oximeter, blood pressure monitor etc

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Image Credit: studioroman

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