Amazon is lowering the cost of a One Medical membership for Amazon Prime subscribers, shaving $100 off the annual fee to $99 a year. The step is the latest effort by the e-commerce company to mesh its chain of doctor’s offices with its retail services.

Amazon already runs a web pharmacy and a telehealth service called Amazon Clinic that uses third-party medical providers to help treat less serious conditions, like pinkeye. It’s also testing a service to drop medications on its pharmacy patients’ doorsteps via drone in an hour or less.

A Prime subscription runs $139 a year, also offering streaming services and quicker shipping.

    • @[email protected]
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      181 year ago

      In a for-profit medical industry, what’s the difference? All those hospitals and medical conglomerates in your country are Amazon with a different name.

      • @HeyJoe
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        51 year ago

        As someone who works in medical I can say hospitals and other medical facilities absolutely can not sell your data without violating tons of hipaa regulations. I can say we can allow a company to come in and obfuscate data before selling it off. The big difference here would be there can not be any identifier that can link anyone (which happens with most companies that sell data), it’s mostly data on trends. If you can prove otherwise that would be a hell of an amazing lawsuit.

      • gullible
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        31 year ago

        A tiny evil company vs a multinational, data hungry, oligopoly chasing, soul stealing incarnation of human avarice. There’s a difference, Amazon employee. I’ve seen several people calling Amazon the lesser of two evils for the last few days and it literally never is. Never. That concept is fiction.

        • @[email protected]
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          31 year ago

          Not an Amazon employee. All capitalistic entities are the same. Extract resources by any (pseudo-legal, or even illegal) means necessary.

          Don’t put words in my mouth, Karen.

          • gullible
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            11 year ago

            In a for-profit medical industry, what’s the difference?

            The implication is that Amazon is equal or perhaps even better. There’s no ethical consumption under capitalism but there are certainly tiers of depravity and degrees of separation, and absolving yourself of thinking about them doesn’t help. If Karen’s only crime is hating Amazon, that solidifies the woman hating origin of the meme.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              You are a Karen because you came here accusing me of being an Amazon shill in a post that has zero evidence pointing to that. I pointed it out and you still double down on your idiotic response.

              Go the fuck away already.

  • rynzcycle
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    241 year ago

    So I looked into it, it’s NOT health insurance. It’s just access to use your health insurance at their video doctors and offices (mostly in major cities). The $9pm is to cover their admin because insurance won’t.

    My PCP already has a pretty good portal, and I’ve not had any issues getting prescriptions filled, why would I pay extra for access when everyone else gives that for free?

  • @BURN
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    51 year ago

    Why would I ever give Amazon my medical data? Let alone pay them for the privilege of it being sold.

    I don’t even like giving medical providers my medical data, and they’re bound by a lot more laws than Amazon.

      • @BURN
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        71 year ago

        “Should”

        I don’t trust it. I don’t really trust any other health provider, but at least they’re not interconnected with a ton of the rest of my life

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      Post title matches the article headline. Headline says $9/month, article body says $99/year. In other words, buy 11 months, get one month free.