Kit Daniels
December 23, 2013
Thousands of self-service “robo-doctor” kiosks are currently being
installed inside Wal-Marts across America which collect personal
information and promote Obamacare through a health screening loaded with
advertisements.
The SoloHealth Station asks users personal health questions and for
their contact information which is then forwarded to a local Obamacare
navigator.
Users are prompted for their date of birth, the number of vegetables
they eat in a day and to describe how often their families use social
media, amongst other things.
During the health screening, the machine displays advertisements targeted at the user based on the answers provided.
“Users enter their age, gender and ethnicity and during the screening
process they are asked a series of lifestyle and behavioral questions,”
a SoloHealth video for advertisers states. “This approach allows hyper-targeting of your messages [advertisements.]”
Some of the advertisements are for over-the-counter medications such
as Prilosec and Zyrtec and the kiosk will likely push even more
medications in the future.
“It is clear there are now many interactive mechanisms that can step
the consumer through the process of self-diagnosis and medication
selection,” said Janet Woodcock, director of the FDA’s Center for Drug
Evaluation and Research at a public hearing in 2012.
After the screening, users can then search for a primary care doctor by their zip code.
Interestingly, when Infowars Nightly News host Jakari Jackson
searched for a doctor using heavily-populated zip codes, no doctors were
found.
These machines appear to be more effective at getting people enrolled
in Obamacare than they are at actually helping people find doctors.
They also have potential privacy risks, according to Consumers Union Senior Attorney Mark Savage.
“You have a situation where a patient is voluntarily disclosing
information, which means there is no privacy protection, generally,” he said to bioethics.net. ”They may not know if the information is being kept and might be used weeks or years after.”
Solohealth’s Chief Commercial Officer Stephen Kendig even stated that
the company is not bound to the privacy provisions under the Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996.
The contact information collected from these machines could be used
by navigators to enroll as many Americans into Obamacare as possible.
As we previously reported, navigators in several states are practically taxpayer-subsidized salespeople who are paid based on their enrollment numbers.
Obamacare has already caused a mass exodus of doctors and other
providers from the healthcare industry. It now appears that they are
being replaced by these self-service machines, like the probation
officer who dispenses SSRIs in the film Elysium:
0 comments:
Post a Comment