Travelers Need a Go-To When Their Getaways Turn Injurious. Why Not Your UCC?

Travelers Need a Go-To When Their Getaways Turn Injurious. Why Not Your UCC?

Americans will be traveling to see family or enjoy getaways in increasing numbers as the winter holidays and school breaks approach. Inevitably, along with the fun there will be skiing accidents, slip-and-fall injuries, and other cold-weather mishaps. Some of those unfortunate events will take place in resort areas, where people don’t have a clue where to turn for convenient care. Durango Urgent Care, clearly, foresaw this need and has arranged to open a location on …

Read More
With COVID-19 Expected to Climb This Winter, Could a Resurgence in MIS-C Be Far Behind?

With COVID-19 Expected to Climb This Winter, Could a Resurgence in MIS-C Be Far Behind?

With COVID-19 Expected to Climb This Winter, Could a Resurgence in MIS-C Be Far Behind? As JUCM News has reported, cases of COVID-19 are expected to climb as we move into the winter months. While some signs point to a “season” that will be less severe than the past couple of years, others paint a less optimistic picture. Either way, it is essential to keep in mind that while otherwise healthy children have been less …

Read More
Too Many Kids Are at Risk for Abuse and Trafficking. Ensure Your Urgent Care Center Is a Safe Haven

Too Many Kids Are at Risk for Abuse and Trafficking. Ensure Your Urgent Care Center Is a Safe Haven

Children and their parents should be able to trust that healthcare providers are among the safest individuals in the world to be around—with should being the operative word. Sadly, that’s an idealistic notion that doesn’t hold up when (fortunately rare) events prove otherwise. Most recently, as reported by 7News Boston, a physician in Massachusetts was one of four men arrested in a sting operation designed to snare individuals willing to pay for sex with 12- …

Read More
Telehealth May Have Its Place—but Follow-Up Care Isn’t It

Telehealth May Have Its Place—but Follow-Up Care Isn’t It

Proponents of telehealth maintain that anything that gets more patients to see a healthcare provider is a step forward. Skeptics counter that there are just too many nuances and observations that can be missed when you’re chatting over electronic devices and not in the presence of the patient. New research published by JAMA Network Open seems to support the latter belief, at least when it comes to follow-up care after a visit to the emergency …

Read More
Monkeypox Has Subsided. Now It’s Time to Watch for the Complications

Monkeypox Has Subsided. Now It’s Time to Watch for the Complications

An upsurge in cases of monkeypox earlier this year displaced mainstream media coverage of COVID-19—for a while, anyway. Now that new cases have slowed, that attention has shifted back to concerns for a resurgence of the pandemic and an accompanying increase in other respiratory viruses. Urgent care providers should be aware that certain complications of monkeypox linger, though, as noted in an article just published by JAMA Neurology. Such vigilance could actually aid in retrospective …

Read More
Doing Well by Doing Good in Your Communities

Doing Well by Doing Good in Your Communities

The community in which your urgent care business operates is probably full of residents who drive past your front door many times a week. Maybe they’ve never noticed, or have been visiting your competitor down the road when they have same-day needs to see a healthcare provider. It’s just as likely that some members of that same community are struggling to make ends meet or to put food on the table—literally. Thanksgiving and the approaching …

Read More
Better Antibiotic Stewardship May Start with Improving Diagnostic Stewardship

Better Antibiotic Stewardship May Start with Improving Diagnostic Stewardship

Urgent care as an industry has made a firm commitment to reducing inappropriate prescriptions for antibiotics. Most often, we picture a clinician resisting patient demands for a script even though they’re experiencing a viral respiratory infection or fighting the urge to write one just in case a culture comes back positive. According to a Medpage Today article based on data presented at IDWeek, a group of hospitals in Michigan found that taking a step back …

Read More
Is It Time for Urgent Care to Overcome Challenges to Offering Mental Health Services?

Is It Time for Urgent Care to Overcome Challenges to Offering Mental Health Services?

Urgent care has made its reputation on being able to offer a wide array of services for patients who don’t need to go to the emergency room but who shouldn’t wait days to go to a primary care practice. For reasons that are many (and valid), that has not extended to patients who need access to mental health services. Most obviously, it’s not what most urgent care centers were created to do, and so are …

Read More
Disparities Could Leave Some Patients at Greater Risk for Flu and Poor Outcomes This Year

Disparities Could Leave Some Patients at Greater Risk for Flu and Poor Outcomes This Year

With this flu season expected to be harsher than others in recent years, while respiratory syncytial virus and COVID-19 are also circulating widely, it will be especially important to ensure that as many Americans as possible are suitably vaccinated. Unfortunately, as was made clearer than ever during the height of the pandemic, some racial and ethnic groups are at greater risk for illness and poor outcomes during viral outbreaks. In fact, according to a new …

Read More
Follow-Up: ‘Tripledemic’ Worries May Be Well-Founded, and Realized Sooner Than Later

Follow-Up: ‘Tripledemic’ Worries May Be Well-Founded, and Realized Sooner Than Later

Just last week, we told you that unusually high cases of respiratory syncytial virus, added to existing concerns over COVID-19 and influenza season, have public health officials in the United States worrying about simultaneous epidemic-level surges of all three viruses. Already, data are pouring in from around the country, raising the alarm that what was first thought to be a potential near-future problem may be an actual present-day crisis. An article published in the Virginia …

Read More