Weatherford, TX private-pay medical transportation
Medical Transportation in Weatherford, TX
Plan private-pay non-emergency rides in Weatherford for hospital discharge, wheelchair, stretcher, dialysis, rehab, and eastbound Fort Worth medical trips with current pricing examples in USD and miles.
Common local routes
- Use the exact campus or facility name, not just “Weatherford hospital” or “dialysis center.”
- Mention stairs, ranch gates, long driveways, porch steps, or apartment access before booking.
- State whether the ride stays inside Weatherford or needs an I-20 eastbound regional plan.
Start here
Start a medical ride request
Enter pickup, drop-off, timing, mobility, stairs, and contact details once so MedicalRide can coordinate the right private-pay non-emergency ride.
Access details that change timing and price in Parker County
Weatherford access issues are practical rather than dramatic, but they change outcomes fast. The city’s medical anchors are spread across East Anderson Street, Fort Worth Highway, Santa Fe Drive, and the Willow Park / I-20 corridor, so “short ride” does not always mean “easy pickup.” A discharge at Medical City Weatherford needs the actual unit, room, and pickup door. Dialysis pickups need the exact center and whether the return should happen at a fixed time or only after the clinic confirms the patient is ready. Rehab and skilled nursing transfers need to say whether the rider is going to ClearSky, College Park, or home, because each destination has a different receiving process. Rural and edge-of-suburb access is another local factor. Parker County homes may have gravel drives, ranch gates, steep porch steps, uneven surfaces, or a long distance between the vehicle and the front door. Apartment and senior-living pickups can involve elevators, hallways, gate codes, and receiving staff. Wheelchair riders should say whether the chair is manual or power and whether they stay in the chair. Stretcher riders should say whether there is bed-to-bed handling, oxygen, or a need for a two-person carry. If the passenger is weak after dialysis, dizzy after a procedure, or anxious about a long ride on I-20, say that before the ride is assigned. Those details affect safety first, and price second. They also help avoid a failed pickup because the crew arrived at the wrong entrance or with the wrong vehicle.
Private-pay medical transportation in Weatherford starts with route fit, not a generic city name
MedicalRide coordinates private-pay non-emergency medical transportation nationwide. In Weatherford, that matters because one ride may stay close to East Anderson Street, another may run out Fort Worth Highway for dialysis, and another may open onto Interstate 20 for a specialist appointment in Fort Worth. Patients and caregivers usually need help when a regular car is unsafe, the rider cannot manage steps or transfers, the pickup must happen at a hospital or facility entrance, or the return plan is not simple enough for family driving. Weatherford can support a real local planning page because the city has a full-service hospital at Medical City Weatherford, two in-city dialysis anchors on different corridors, a rehabilitation hospital, a skilled nursing destination, and an eastbound referral path into the Fort Worth medical district. That mix changes how you should book. A rider going from home to Fresenius on Fort Worth Highway needs a different plan than a rider leaving Medical City Weatherford for ClearSky rehab, and both are very different from a longer regional trip toward Fort Worth or Dallas. Give the exact pickup address, destination address, appointment or discharge time, whether the rider can sit upright, whether they must stay in a wheelchair, whether stairs or a gate are involved, and who will receive the passenger. That is the information that determines ride type, timing, and price. The passenger or caregiver submits ride details once. MedicalRide uses those details to coordinate the route, vehicle type, timing, stairs, assistance level, passenger needs, pricing, and next steps. A ride is not final until availability and booking details are confirmed. For some rides, the customer may start with a booking request or deposit. Urgent, complex, stretcher, bariatric, or long-distance rides may need additional confirmation before final booking. Final availability and pricing depend on the exact route, vehicle type, timing, assistance level, and pickup/drop-off details.
Local guide
What to know before booking in Weatherford
Private-pay medical transportation in Weatherford starts with route fit, not a generic city name
MedicalRide coordinates private-pay non-emergency medical transportation nationwide. In Weatherford, that matters because one ride may stay close to East Anderson Street, another may run out Fort Worth Highway for dialysis, and another may open onto Interstate 20 for a specialist appointment in Fort Worth. Patients and caregivers usually need help when a regular car is unsafe, the rider cannot manage steps or transfers, the pickup must happen at a hospital or facility entrance, or the return plan is not simple enough for family driving.
Weatherford can support a real local planning page because the city has a full-service hospital at Medical City Weatherford, two in-city dialysis anchors on different corridors, a rehabilitation hospital, a skilled nursing destination, and an eastbound referral path into the Fort Worth medical district. That mix changes how you should book. A rider going from home to Fresenius on Fort Worth Highway needs a different plan than a rider leaving Medical City Weatherford for ClearSky rehab, and both are very different from a longer regional trip toward Fort Worth or Dallas.
Give the exact pickup address, destination address, appointment or discharge time, whether the rider can sit upright, whether they must stay in a wheelchair, whether stairs or a gate are involved, and who will receive the passenger. That is the information that determines ride type, timing, and price. The passenger or caregiver submits ride details once. MedicalRide uses those details to coordinate the route, vehicle type, timing, stairs, assistance level, passenger needs, pricing, and next steps. A ride is not final until availability and booking details are confirmed. For some rides, the customer may start with a booking request or deposit. Urgent, complex, stretcher, bariatric, or long-distance rides may need additional confirmation before final booking. Final availability and pricing depend on the exact route, vehicle type, timing, assistance level, and pickup/drop-off details.
- Use the exact campus or facility name, not just “Weatherford hospital” or “dialysis center.”
- Mention stairs, ranch gates, long driveways, porch steps, or apartment access before booking.
- State whether the ride stays inside Weatherford or needs an I-20 eastbound regional plan.
Local hospitals, dialysis, rehab, and Fort Worth referral anchors
Weatherford ride planning is strongest when the medical destination is named precisely. The main local hospital anchor is Medical City Weatherford Hospital at 713 East Anderson Street, a 103-bed acute-care hospital that serves Parker County and offers nearly 30 medical specialties. For rehabilitation or post-acute planning, Medical City Weatherford also highlights a Rehabilitation Institute with speech and physical therapy treatment. Recurring kidney-care travel usually turns on which dialysis center the rider uses: Fresenius Kidney Care Weatherford at 2025 Fort Worth Highway Suite 400 or U.S. Renal Care Weatherford at 504 Santa Fe Drive.
If the patient is leaving a hospital but is not ready for home, two local rehab and recovery anchors matter: ClearSky Rehabilitation Hospital of Weatherford at 703 Eureka Street and College Park Rehabilitation and Care Center at 1715 Martin Drive. ClearSky is a dedicated rehabilitation hospital, while College Park offers short-term rehabilitation, skilled nursing, long-term care, outpatient therapy, and hospice or palliative support. Those are different destinations with different receiving workflows, so the request should say whether the rider is heading to inpatient rehab, skilled nursing, outpatient therapy, or home.
Regional care also matters here. Medical City Fort Worth describes itself as a tertiary referral center for numerous counties within a 90-mile radius, which makes Fort Worth a practical eastbound medical corridor from Parker County. Texas Health Willow Park is another useful local access point because it serves Willow Park, Weatherford, Aledo, Hudson Oaks, and Annetta with emergency and outpatient care, then transfers surgery or admission cases to the appropriate hospital when needed. That means Weatherford ride planning often involves both a local campus and a second-stage regional destination.
- Medical City Weatherford is the main acute-care anchor inside the city.
- Dialysis pickups split between Fort Worth Highway and Santa Fe Drive.
- Rehab transfers often point to ClearSky or College Park instead of a simple home discharge.
- Fort Worth specialist trips are common when Weatherford is the starting market but not the final care destination.
Common Weatherford route patterns patients actually need
The most common non-emergency patterns are practical and repeatable. First, many rides start at a Weatherford home, senior apartment, or caregiver address and end at Medical City Weatherford on East Anderson Street for testing, surgery follow-up, wound care, outpatient therapy, or a discharge return. Second, recurring dialysis riders often move between central Weatherford, Hudson Oaks, Willow Park, or nearby Parker County neighborhoods and one of the two dialysis anchors: Fresenius on Fort Worth Highway or U.S. Renal Care on Santa Fe Drive. Third, some rides begin at Medical City Weatherford and continue to ClearSky rehab, College Park skilled nursing, or a home that needs more access planning than a quick curbside drop-off.
Regional patterns matter too. Weatherford sits about 30 miles west of Fort Worth and about 60 miles west of Dallas, with Interstate 20 along the city’s southern boundary, so eastbound Fort Worth specialist travel is part of the real market. Families often need a wheelchair or assisted trip into the Fort Worth medical district for heart, vascular, orthopedic, cancer, transplant, or brain-and-spine care. Even when the rider starts in Weatherford, the real complexity can be the destination entrance, return timing, and whether the passenger remains strong enough to come back the same day.
The last pattern is the mixed suburban corridor ride: a patient in Willow Park, Hudson Oaks, or Aledo may need emergency or outpatient care near home, then a second trip to Weatherford or Fort Worth once the treatment plan changes. That is why every request should name the actual route endpoints instead of assuming “Weatherford” is enough by itself.
- Home, apartment, senior-living, or caregiver pickups in Weatherford to Medical City Weatherford Hospital on East Anderson Street for surgery follow-up, imaging, emergency discharge, outpatient testing, and therapy-related visits.
- Recurring dialysis transportation from Weatherford, Hudson Oaks, Willow Park, or nearby Parker County addresses to Fresenius Kidney Care Weatherford on Fort Worth Highway or U.S. Renal Care Weatherford on Santa Fe Drive.
- Hospital discharge or transfer rides from Medical City Weatherford to ClearSky Rehabilitation Hospital of Weatherford, College Park Rehabilitation and Care Center, or a home setting that needs wheelchair, stretcher, or assisted entry support.
- Weatherford and Parker County trips east on I-20 toward Medical City Fort Worth and the Fort Worth medical district when the rider needs specialty care, a tertiary referral hospital, or a higher-acuity but still non-emergency destination.
- Local Parker County rides involving Weatherford, Hudson Oaks, Willow Park, or Aledo when the passenger needs a wheelchair van, door-to-door assistance, or a carefully timed return after treatment.
Choose sedan, ambulette, door-to-door, wheelchair, assisted, stretcher, or bariatric based on how the rider moves
Weatherford ride planning works best when the service level matches the rider, not the diagnosis alone. A sedan or basic ambulatory ride fits a stable passenger who can walk, transfer with limited help, and manage normal vehicle entry. A basic ambulette or door-to-door ride is better when the rider can still sit upright but needs a steadier handoff through a porch, apartment hall, clinic entrance, or dialysis doorway. Wheelchair transportation fits riders who need a ramp or lift vehicle and either cannot make a safe standard transfer or must remain in their chair. Assisted ambulatory service fits riders who can sit upright but need more hands-on help than a simple curbside trip.
Stretcher transportation is the right choice when sitting upright is unsafe, pain is not controlled in a seated position, the rider needs bed-to-bed handling, or the discharging and receiving teams expect a flat or reclined transfer. Bariatric transportation is different again: the passenger’s weight, width, transfer needs, and home or facility access determine whether the standard wheelchair or stretcher plan is insufficient. In Parker County, this usually becomes obvious when the pickup includes narrow hallways, a rural driveway, more than a few porch steps, or a receiving facility that needs a specific handoff.
The easiest way to avoid a wrong ride type is to say whether the rider can sit upright for the full trip, whether they can transfer, whether they are in a manual or power chair, whether oxygen or medical equipment is coming, and whether anyone will help receive them at the destination. These pages explain private-pay planning only. They do not promise Medicare, Medicaid, insurance, VA, or facility-funded coverage, and they do not guarantee reimbursement.
- Sedan / ambulatory rides currently start around $49 plus mileage.
- Door-to-door rides currently start around $78 plus mileage.
- Wheelchair rides currently start around $89 plus mileage.
- Assisted ambulatory rides currently start around $129 plus mileage.
- Stretcher rides currently start around $249 plus mileage, with bariatric service starting around $299 plus mileage.
Weatherford pricing guidance in current USD and miles
The live pricing sheet for U.S. rides is clear about the starting points patients should plan around. Current base prices are about $49 for sedan / ambulatory, $59 for ambulette, $78 for door-to-door, $89 for wheelchair, $129 for assisted ambulatory, $249 for stretcher, and $299 for bariatric service. Regular mileage is $4.75 per mile, after-hours mileage is $5.25 per mile, and long-distance mileage is $4.50 per mile. Same-day rides add about $15, after-hours adds about $25, weekends add about $10, discharge coordination adds about $15, oxygen or equipment handling adds about $30, and stairs currently add about $40 for 1 to 3 steps, $75 for 4 to 10 steps, $125 for more than 10 steps, or $90 when the step count is still unclear.
Wait time also matters. The live sheet currently plans around about $50 per hour for ambulatory time, $75 per hour for wheelchair wait time, and $145 per hour for stretcher wait time. Those numbers do not guarantee a final bill, because the real route, timing, rider fit, and destination handoff still matter, but they give families a much more useful starting point than a generic “call for price” answer.
Worked local examples: $89 wheelchair base + 9 miles x $4.75 = about $132 before add-ons for a local ride between west Weatherford and Medical City Weatherford. $129 assisted base + 33 miles x $4.75 = about $286 before add-ons for an eastbound Weatherford-to-Fort Worth specialty trip. $249 stretcher base + 4 miles x $4.75 + $15 discharge coordination = about $283 before stairs, oxygen, or wait time for a Weatherford hospital release to local rehab. $0 long-distance base + 60 miles x $4.50 = about $270 before after-hours, oxygen, or extra support for a longer Texas medical route. These are planning examples, not guaranteed final totals, but they reflect the current live pricing sheet and the kinds of local routes families actually compare in Weatherford.
- $89 wheelchair base + 9 miles x $4.75 = about $132 before add-ons for a local ride between west Weatherford and Medical City Weatherford.
- $129 assisted base + 33 miles x $4.75 = about $286 before add-ons for an eastbound Weatherford-to-Fort Worth specialty trip.
- $249 stretcher base + 4 miles x $4.75 + $15 discharge coordination = about $283 before stairs, oxygen, or wait time for a Weatherford hospital release to local rehab.
- $0 long-distance base + 60 miles x $4.50 = about $270 before after-hours, oxygen, or extra support for a longer Texas medical route.
Access details that change timing and price in Parker County
Weatherford access issues are practical rather than dramatic, but they change outcomes fast. The city’s medical anchors are spread across East Anderson Street, Fort Worth Highway, Santa Fe Drive, and the Willow Park / I-20 corridor, so “short ride” does not always mean “easy pickup.” A discharge at Medical City Weatherford needs the actual unit, room, and pickup door. Dialysis pickups need the exact center and whether the return should happen at a fixed time or only after the clinic confirms the patient is ready. Rehab and skilled nursing transfers need to say whether the rider is going to ClearSky, College Park, or home, because each destination has a different receiving process.
Rural and edge-of-suburb access is another local factor. Parker County homes may have gravel drives, ranch gates, steep porch steps, uneven surfaces, or a long distance between the vehicle and the front door. Apartment and senior-living pickups can involve elevators, hallways, gate codes, and receiving staff. Wheelchair riders should say whether the chair is manual or power and whether they stay in the chair. Stretcher riders should say whether there is bed-to-bed handling, oxygen, or a need for a two-person carry. If the passenger is weak after dialysis, dizzy after a procedure, or anxious about a long ride on I-20, say that before the ride is assigned.
Those details affect safety first, and price second. They also help avoid a failed pickup because the crew arrived at the wrong entrance or with the wrong vehicle.
- Name the exact hospital, dialysis, rehab, or skilled nursing entrance whenever possible.
- Disclose steps, ramps, elevators, gates, and long driveways before booking.
- Say whether the return is fixed, flexible, or tied to a nurse or clinic call.
Hospital discharge, recurring dialysis, and rehab need different planning rhythms
Hospital discharge planning is sensitive to release timing, destination readiness, and support level. A Weatherford discharge back home may only need door-to-door, assisted, wheelchair, or stretcher planning, but the difference between those services becomes critical once the patient is tired, medicated, or unable to handle steps. Families should have the discharge lounge or room number, unit contact, destination address, home access details, and the name of any caregiver who will receive the rider. If the patient is going to ClearSky or College Park instead of home, the receiving facility and admission window should be confirmed before pickup.
Dialysis planning is different because the route repeats. Riders going to Fresenius on Fort Worth Highway or U.S. Renal Care on Santa Fe Drive usually benefit from a routine pickup window and a more flexible return plan. Many patients are weaker on the return leg than on the outbound leg, so the booking notes should say whether the rider needs a wheelchair, assisted entry, or extra supervision after treatment. If the route starts in Willow Park, Hudson Oaks, or a rural Parker County address, say that too, because the travel time and loading conditions are different from a compact in-town stop.
Rehab rides live somewhere between those two patterns. They may begin with a discharge, continue with therapy visits, and end with a different level of assistance a few weeks later. That is why Weatherford planning changes from one phase of recovery to the next. The care destinations and ride needs actually change from one phase of recovery to the next.
- Discharge rides depend on room release, entrance instructions, and destination readiness.
- Dialysis rides depend on chair times, fatigue after treatment, and a realistic return window.
- Rehab rides often change service level as the patient regains strength.
Public transit, family driving, and private-pay alternatives in Weatherford
Not every Weatherford medical trip needs a private-pay ride, and families should compare the options honestly. Public Transit Services in Parker County provides door-to-door transportation, but the local guidance says it generally needs 2 to 7 days of advance notice, runs from 6 am to 6 pm, and does not operate on holidays or weekends. That can work for some routine appointments when the rider has flexible timing, limited assistance needs, and enough notice. It is much less reliable for same-day discharge, late-afternoon dialysis return uncertainty, multi-stop hospital coordination, or any ride that needs a specific vehicle type.
Family driving may still be the right answer when the rider can transfer safely, does not need wheelchair securement, is not leaving a hospital after sedation, and can tolerate a simple curbside pickup. But Weatherford families often move to private-pay medical transportation when the rider needs a ramp vehicle, help through the doorway, bed-to-bed handling, oxygen, or a precisely timed handoff at a hospital, dialysis center, rehab hospital, or skilled nursing facility. The difference is not luxury. It is whether the passenger can be moved safely and predictably.
The practical question is not “Is private-pay always better?” It is “Does this rider need more control than family driving or scheduled public transit can provide today?” When the answer is yes, private-pay planning becomes easier once the caregiver shares the route, mobility level, access notes, and timing window in one clear request.
- Parker County public transit is useful for some routine weekday rides with advance notice.
- Private-pay is usually the better fit for discharge, wheelchair securement, stretcher transport, oxygen, or exact entrance handoff.
- Family driving may still work when the rider can transfer easily and timing is flexible.
Booking checklist and emergency boundary for Weatherford rides
MedicalRide is for private-pay non-emergency medical transportation. It is not an ambulance service. If the passenger has a medical emergency or needs medical monitoring during transport, call 911 or the appropriate emergency service.
For a Weatherford request, prepare the rider name, exact pickup and destination addresses, preferred arrival time, ride type, whether the rider can sit upright, whether they stay in a wheelchair, whether oxygen or medical equipment is involved, and whether the trip is one-way, round trip, or recurring. Add the unit or discharge lounge for Medical City Weatherford, the exact dialysis site on Fort Worth Highway or Santa Fe Drive, the receiving facility name for ClearSky or College Park, and any gate code, porch steps, elevator, or long driveway details.
If the trip is heading east toward Fort Worth, say whether the rider can tolerate the full route in a seated position or needs stretcher support. If the ride may happen after hours or on a weekend, say that immediately so timing and price expectations stay realistic. If the rider is coming home after a procedure, say who will receive them and whether prescriptions, durable medical equipment, or home setup must be ready first. The more exact the Weatherford route details are, the more accurate the planning becomes.
- MedicalRide is for private-pay non-emergency medical transportation. It is not an ambulance service. If the passenger has a medical emergency or needs medical monitoring during transport, call 911 or the appropriate emergency service.
- These pages explain private-pay planning only. They do not promise Medicare, Medicaid, insurance, VA, or facility-funded coverage, and they do not guarantee reimbursement.
- Use the exact local campus and destination entrance in every booking request.
Provider directory
NEMT provider listings covering Weatherford, TX
These public directory listings use public-safe service and location signals. Listings are not a guarantee of availability, price, licensing, or acceptance for a specific ride; MedicalRide still confirms the route, timing, mobility needs, stairs, equipment, and payment details before pickup.
- View listing
Happy Trails North Texas
Based In Fort Worth, TX
Wheelchair transportationStretcher transportLong-distance medical transportDialysis transportationArea clues: Based In Fort Worth, TX · Weatherford, TX · South Main Street
Related pages
More MedicalRide pages for Weatherford
- Wheelchair transportation in Weatherford
- Stretcher transportation in Weatherford
- Hospital discharge transportation in Weatherford
- Dialysis transportation in Weatherford
- Long-distance medical transportation from Weatherford
- Medical transportation in Fort Worth, TX
- Medical transportation in Arlington, TX
- Medical transportation in Dallas, TX
- Texas medical transportation cities
- Medical City Weatherford Hospital
- Fresenius Kidney Care Weatherford
- U.S. Renal Care Weatherford
- ClearSky Rehabilitation Hospital of Weatherford
- College Park Rehabilitation and Care Center
- Medical City Fort Worth Hospital
- Texas Health Willow Park
Sources and local signals
Where this page gets its local context
These sources support the local facilities, routes, care corridors, and access notes used on this page. MedicalRide still confirms route fit, timing, vehicle type, and pricing for every actual ride request.
- Medical City Weatherford Hospital
Supports the 713 E Anderson St hospital anchor, 103-bed hospital description, rehab institute mention, and local hospital route planning.
- Medical City Weatherford contact page
Supports exact address use for discharge, entrance, and pickup planning.
- Fresenius Kidney Care Weatherford
Supports the Fort Worth Highway dialysis anchor, local route examples, and recurring-treatment timing guidance.
- U.S. Renal Care Weatherford
Supports the Santa Fe Drive dialysis anchor and a second recurring-treatment destination inside Weatherford.
- ClearSky Rehabilitation Hospital of Weatherford
Supports the Eureka Street rehabilitation hospital anchor and post-acute transfer planning.
- College Park Rehabilitation and Care Center
Supports the Martin Drive skilled nursing and short-term rehabilitation anchor used in transfer and discharge planning.
- Medical City Fort Worth Hospital
Supports Fort Worth referral-route language, tertiary referral positioning, and specialty-care corridor examples from Weatherford.
- Texas Health Willow Park
Supports Willow Park, Hudson Oaks, Aledo, and Weatherford emergency/outpatient access notes and regional transfer language.
- Weatherford city history and location
Supports Interstate 20, U.S. 180, and Weatherford-to-Fort Worth/Dallas access language.
- Public Transit Services in Parker County
Supports local public-transport alternative language about Parker County door-to-door service, advance notice, and weekday limits.
FAQ
Questions about Weatherford medical rides
- How much does private-pay medical transportation cost in Weatherford?
- Current planning rates start around $49 for sedan / ambulatory, $78 for door-to-door, $89 for wheelchair, $129 for assisted ambulatory, $249 for stretcher, and $299 for bariatric service, with regular mileage around $4.75 per mile. The final total can still change with after-hours timing, stairs, oxygen, wait time, discharge coordination, and route length.
- What local destinations do these Weatherford pages cover?
- They cover Medical City Weatherford, Texas Health Willow Park, Fresenius Kidney Care Weatherford, U.S. Renal Care Weatherford, ClearSky Rehabilitation Hospital of Weatherford, College Park Rehabilitation and Care Center, and common eastbound specialist routes into Fort Worth.
- When should I book wheelchair instead of stretcher transportation?
- Choose wheelchair service when the rider can sit upright safely for the trip, even if they need a ramp or lift vehicle. Choose stretcher transportation when sitting upright is unsafe, the rider needs bed-to-bed handling, or the sending or receiving team requires a flat or reclined transfer.
- Can recurring dialysis rides be scheduled in Weatherford?
- Yes. Provide the exact dialysis center, treatment days, chair time, expected return window, mobility level, and a contact number. Return rides should allow flexibility because treatment can run long or the rider can feel weaker afterward.
- Is this page about private-pay or insurance-funded transportation?
- These pages explain private-pay planning only. They do not promise Medicare, Medicaid, insurance, VA, or facility-funded coverage, and they do not guarantee reimbursement.
- Should I use public transit or private-pay service for a Parker County medical trip?
- Public Transit Services can help with some routine weekday trips when you have advance notice and the rider needs limited help. Private-pay service is usually the better fit for discharge, wheelchair securement, stretcher travel, oxygen, stairs, or exact arrival timing.
- What should I include in a Weatherford discharge request?
- Include the hospital, unit, room or discharge lounge, release window, destination address, ride type, stairs, caregiver contact, and whether the patient is going home, to rehab, or to skilled nursing.
- When should I call 911 instead of booking a ride?
- MedicalRide is for private-pay non-emergency medical transportation. It is not an ambulance service. If the passenger has a medical emergency or needs medical monitoring during transport, call 911 or the appropriate emergency service.
