Usa India Health platform Usa India

SaveIN partners MyKare Health to offer instant finance for healthcare treatments

Reading now: 438
www.livemint.com

Buy now pay later platform for healthcare SaveIN has partnered MyKare Health, a tech-enabled, full-stack and asset-light healthcare chain comprising of small and medium size hospitals, to expand its care now pay later offerings across India.

Through this partnership, SaveIN would be able to extend its paperless instant checkout finance for standardized and elective healthcare procedures across the network hospitals of MyKareHealth. “We are delighted to partner with MyKareHealth and aim to deliver timely and affordable healthcare to their fast growing customer base powered by our Care now, Pay later healthcare finance solution," said Jitin Bhasin, founder and CEO, SaveIN.

SaveIN aims to build a pan India, integrated healthcare ecosystem that enables customers to benefit from embedded healthcare finance with enhanced affordability at high quality and vetted SaveIN healthcare providers covering various out-patient and elective care services.

Customers can visit SaveIN partners near them and can avail healthcare products and treatments at zero or low cost EMIs. “While we are onboarding hundreds of individual healthcare providers on the SaveIN platform every month, integrating with institutions and healthcare chains is also integral to our growth strategy since it helps accelerate our reach across the country" added Jitin Bhasin.

Read more on livemint.com
The website covid-19.rehab is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

Alberta Health Services no longer requires COVID-19 immunization for its workers - globalnews.ca
globalnews.ca
88%
606
Alberta Health Services no longer requires COVID-19 immunization for its workers
COVID-19 immunization policy for its workers.The agency says workers, as well as new hires and students, will no longer be required to have at least two vaccine doses.It says vaccines continue to provide strong protection against serious effects from COVID-19, but there is emerging evidence that the shots have become less protective against infection.AHS says COVID-19 vaccines available to date target the original strain of the virus.It says evidence shows that immunization without boosters has limited effectiveness in reducing transmission of the Omicron variants currently circulating. Alberta expects to be vaccinating children under 5 against COVID-19 by end of July The agency says its workforce continues to be required to stay home when sick, wear required personal protective equipment and practise hand hygiene.“The immunization policy was implemented to protect patients, health-care workers and the public at a time during the pandemic when the immunization required by the policy was still effective in preventing transmission and when it was needed most to help contain the spread of COVID-19,” Mauro Chies, the interim president and CEO of AHS, said in a statement Monday.“Policies and procedures have had to constantly evolve during the pandemic to reflect significant changes in the virus itself and the ever-changing evidence base as we continue to protect our people and patients.”Opposition NDP health critic David Shepherd called the move a political decision by the UCP, not a clinical one made by AHS healthcare professionals.“Anyone who is being cared for in a health facility should have the assurance that staff are vaccinated against COVID-19, among many other diseases.
DMCA