Coronavirus pandemic

Healthcare workers find it easier now to get a ride home

Number of GrabCare drivers up from 2,000 in February to 10,000 now

Alexandra Hospital's patient service associate Jaylyn Ong (left) and medical laboratory technologist Candy Austria Quiambao are among healthcare workers who have benefited from the GrabCare service.
Alexandra Hospital's patient service associate Jaylyn Ong (left) and medical laboratory technologist Candy Austria Quiambao are among healthcare workers who have benefited from the GrabCare service. PHOTO: ALEXANDRA HOSPITAL

Healthcare workers looking for a ride home after a long shift are now finding one more easily than during the early days of the coronavirus outbreak, when they were widely shunned.

GrabCare, a service started in February by ride-hailing firm Grab to address a reluctance among drivers to pick up healthcare workers for fear of infection, has grown significantly.

The number of drivers signing up for the dedicated service has shot up from 2,000 when it was launched in early February to 10,000 this month - or an estimated 50 per cent of Grab's driver pool.

From March 2 to March 29, Grab offered these drivers a 100 per cent rebate on the commission the company charges for each ride. And since March 30, the rebate was reduced to 25 per cent.

While Grab would not reveal the number of rides taken via GrabCare, The Straits Times understands that demand for the service is now 10 times what it was in February, with a cater rate of more than 90 per cent, meaning at least nine in 10 who book a ride get one.

Observers said this could also be partly because overall demand has plunged because of the stay-home measures in place.

A Grab spokesman said GrabCare now covers 14 hospitals, up from the initial one (the National Centre for Infectious Diseases).

"We are working to roll it out to more hospitals, and will also start the second phase of the service soon, which is to pick up healthcare workers from home," he said.

Alexandra Hospital, where 35 per cent of staff have signed up for GrabCare, said the service is especially helpful for those who work late shifts.

Ms Candy Austria Quiambao, 38, who works a permanent 8pm to 8am shift as a medical laboratory technologist at the hospital, said: "I am just so beat at the end of my shift, I want to get home quickly to catch some sleep before reporting to work again in the same evening."

Ms Quiambao said her workload has increased since the outbreak. She tests both suspected and confirmed Covid-19 cases, on top of routine cases from non-Covid-19 patients.

As of Wednesday, Alexandra Hospital has cared for 99 confirmed Covid-19 patients, and done 1,300 swabs to test for the virus.

Ms Jaylyn Ong, 25, a patient service associate at the hospital who uses a walking aid because of a childhood injury, relies on private-hire cars when she is tired.

"I remember in the earlier days of the outbreak, there was once when I sat down inside an MRT train in my uniform after my shift, and the passenger next to me immediately got up to stand away," she said. "That hurt a bit."

Ms Ong's work involves talking to patients' next of kin about financial, admission and administrative matters. She also goes on rounds to visit patients at their bedside.

She and Ms Quiambao are among 40,000 or so public healthcare personnel who are still commuting to work.

Various quarters have extended assistance to these front-line workers. Community Foundation of Singapore has distributed 50,000 taxi vouchers worth $250,000 to 11 hospitals and 21 polyclinics.

Taxi operator ComfortDelGro is offering promotion codes, with three hospitals, one community hospital and six polyclinics in the west receiving $10,000 worth of such codes.

Ride-hailing firm Gojek is also offering some $80,000 worth of similar promo codes. Promo codes essentially translate to discounted fares.

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on April 17, 2020, with the headline Healthcare workers find it easier now to get a ride home. Subscribe