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    ready responders

    Explore " ready responders" with insightful episodes like "The Reality of 21st Century Healthcare" and "Virtual Reality & The Uber of Medical Care" from podcasts like ""It's New Orleans: Out to Lunch" and "It's Baton Rouge: Out to Lunch"" and more!

    Episodes (2)

    The Reality of 21st Century Healthcare

    The Reality of 21st Century Healthcare

    Human beings have probably been talking about their health since language was invented. Today, the reality of 21st Century healthcare compels us to deal with everything from the cost of an ambulance ride to the fallout of over-prescribed painkillers. 

    Let's start with the latter. Locally, in Louisiana there are reportedly more prescriptions for opioids than there are citizens of the state.

    One of the cures for this problem is to have doctors stop writing so many prescriptions. That's all well and good as a long-term plan for the future, but for New Orleanians addicted to drugs today, who want to cure their addiction now, getting into a rehab program has often meant leaving New Orleans and Louisiana.

    Chris McMahon is President and CEO of a company that is addressing this issue. Longbranch Healthcare runs Longbranch Recovery with an outpatient clinic in Old Metairie, and an inpatient residential facility, in Abita Springs.

    If you’ve ever had a medical emergency and called an ambulance, you will have discovered that if your insurance doesn’t cover it, your transportation to hospital costs you somewhere around a thousand dollars.

    And the only place the ambulance will take you is a hospital emergency room. This might, on the face of it, sound sensible, but the reality of 21st Century healthcare is that hospital emergency rooms are generally swamped, over-run with patients. The reason for this is that a percentage of patients waiting for care are in the wrong place: because their condition is not actually a medical emergency.

    A local New Orleans company is setting out to solve both the ambulance and the emergency room issues.

    Ready Responders has a network of alternative EMT workers who arrive at the scene of an emergency on foot, by bicycle, or in their own car. Rather than automatically take the patient to the ER, the responder makes a case-based decision about what should happen to the patient. That might be patching them up and sending them on their way, or putting them in touch with the right medical professional in the community, other than the ER.

    Justin Dangel is CEO and co-founder of Ready Responders. In a sales pitch kind of way, the concept is kind of "the Uber of EMS" but it's actually based on a working model that predates Uber and has some real-world testing that Justin witnessed first-hand on the ground in Israel.

    Out to Lunch is recorded over lunch at Commander's Palace in New Orleans. See photos from this show by Kallistia Bilinsky and more at our website https://link.chtbl.com/LYuaasWe

    Check out another investigation into 21st Century healthcare in Louisiana, here

     

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Virtual Reality & The Uber of Medical Care

    Virtual Reality & The Uber of Medical Care

    Technology is all around us today, making possible things we never even imagined. Here's two: an app that is the Uber of medical care, and Virtual Reality that  makes it possible to train employees to work in a chemical plants or recreate the battle of Okinawa. Perhaps an equally surprising fact about these innovations is that they are being created here in south Louisiana.

    Vashon Craft is Director of Community Relations at a company called Ready Responders, a New Orleans-based startup that expanded into the Baton Rouge market in 2019, bringing with it its unique service of on-demand health care to your door – or wherever you are. 

    Ready Responders dispatches medics on-demand to provide non-emergency medical care—then offers follow up care with nurses and physicians assistants. It’s all done via a smart phone app using software the company developed.  

    Cody Louviere is the founder of King Crow Studios, a local software development firm that specializes in virtual reality and video game development. Virtual Reality isn’t just a gimmick; it’s a tool that King Crow is using to create training experiences and platforms for customers that include LED FastStart, ExxonMobil, The Department of Defense, and The Alliance Safety Council.

    This show is recorded over lunch at Mansurs on the Boulevard in Baton Rouge.

    You can see photos from this show, and more, here.

    Check out other Baton Rouge tech developers here.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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