Patient Care Access News

Population-Tailored Rideshare Non-Emergency Medical Transportation

People who need on-demand rides with limited medical equipment are good candidates for rideshare non-emergency medical transportation.

who benefits from rideshare non-emergency medical transportation

Source: Getty Images

By Sara Heath

- Rideshare companies, like Uber and Lyft, are good additions to the non-emergency medical transportation (NEMT) ecosystem, researchers from the RAND Corporation wrote in a recent report, and are particularly good for patients who need to request rides or need a ride on-demand.

The report, which builds on the argument that NEMT is good for overcoming transportation barriers to care, outlines particularly for which patients rideshare options are a good fit and how to scale rideshare to meet population needs.

But per the RAND Corporation assessment, traditional NEMT providers, referred to as transportation network companies or TNCs, also see some gaps in efficiency. For example, although many Medicare and Medicaid plans cover NEMT for members, that coverage can be spotty and vary across states.