Free Webinar: Setting Up Your On-Site Lab Service the Right Way

Free Webinar: Setting Up Your On-Site Lab Service the Right Way

The last thing ill-feeling patients want to hear from you is that they have to go to another location for some tests. (And, realizing that, it’s probably the last thing you want to tell them.) As such, the ability to run lab tests on site not only makes life easier for patients who value convenience; it is also becoming a clinical imperative. The good news is that setting up your urgent care operations to offer …

Read More
Get Ready for an Uptick in Tick-Related Visits

Get Ready for an Uptick in Tick-Related Visits

The weather is warm, schools are getting out, and people are venturing off into the wild for outdoor adventure—and to face the perils of tick-infested woods and fields. Visits to urgent care sparked by fear of tick-borne illnesses are sure to follow. In addition to well-known (though still relatively uncommon) diagnoses like Lyme disease and Rocky Mountain spotted fever, the newly identified Human Powassan (POW) virus can be deadly in some cases. Its symptoms are …

Read More
Landlords Should Rejoice as Urgent Care Continues to Fill Local Retail Spaces

Landlords Should Rejoice as Urgent Care Continues to Fill Local Retail Spaces

It’s tough out there for retailers—which means it’s at least as tough for the building managers and owners that do business with them. While urgent care centers used to be considered a “bad fit” (along with all medical facilities), they’re now becoming the darlings of retail space developers. National UC Realty puts the number of active urgent care locations at 9,600 and climbing, making the industry a presence that cannot be ignored on the real …

Read More
Could Telehealth Usher in Treatment of Broader Complaints in Urgent Care?

Could Telehealth Usher in Treatment of Broader Complaints in Urgent Care?

Infectious disease is not an area one would expect urgent care to play an important role, typically. If a patient in a rural county needed to “see” an ID at an urban teaching hospital, though, a virtual visit facilitated by the local urgent care center might be the patient’s best shot at getting the care they need in a timely manner. That kind of value has been demonstrated in a new study of infectious disease …

Read More
Occ Med Providers: Workers Are Failing Drug Tests More Often

Occ Med Providers: Workers Are Failing Drug Tests More Often

More American workers are failing tests for illegal drugs these days than in many years. Quest Diagnostics reports that 4.2% of the 8.9 million employee drug tests it administered last year came back positive; that’s the highest rate since 2004. Marijuana remains the most prevalent, though other drugs are also on the rise. This is especially surprising, given the fact that so many states have looser laws on marijuana use for medical or recreational purposes. …

Read More
Part-Time Restaurant Workers Gain Urgent Care Access in California

Part-Time Restaurant Workers Gain Urgent Care Access in California

Members of the Golden Gate Restaurant Association (GGRA) who work 8 to 20 hours a week in San Francisco eateries now have a place to go for walk-in care without paying anything out of pocket. Dignity Health-GoHealth Urgent Care reached an agreement with the GGRA to provide at least four visits per year to its centers (more for GGRA members who work more hours, according to a formula worked out under the city’s Health Care …

Read More
FastMed Urgent Care Hopes to Break Through in China

FastMed Urgent Care Hopes to Break Through in China

FastMed Urgent Care has made an ambitious, intercontinental leap by opening its first urgent care location in China—the first such move by any U.S.-based urgent care operator. Sami Elbadramany, executive vice president of FastMed, says the company is betting that China’s efforts to transform its healthcare system by providing broader access to more of its citizens will dovetail nicely with the urgent care model. Its first location sits in the Pudong New District in Shanghai, …

Read More
More Opportunities in Telemedicine When Rural Hospitals Close

More Opportunities in Telemedicine When Rural Hospitals Close

Urgent care operators who have been waiting for the elusive “right time” to start offering telemedicine might want to keep an eye out for hospital closures in their area—especially if those hospitals have been providing care where there aren’t many other options. A new study by the Texas A & M Rural and Community Health highlights telemedicine as a viable, and valuable, alternative for care when hospitals shutter their doors. The researchers even went so …

Read More
There Are Still Too Many Prescriptions for Low Back Pain

There Are Still Too Many Prescriptions for Low Back Pain

It’s been more than a year since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended that opioids not be used to treat chronic back pain. Unfortunately, too many prescribers have yet to get the message, according to new data from an NPR-Truven Health Analytics Health Poll. The data, reflecting the experiences of 3,002 patients participating in a telephone survey, show that 40% of the visits to a doctor for low back pain ended with a …

Read More
It’s Been a Tough Spring for Direct Primary Care

It’s Been a Tough Spring for Direct Primary Care

Direct primary care—in which practices bill patients recurring fees (often monthly) that cover many services without additional charges—is faltering, with the closure of two pioneers of the model recently. Qliance Medical Management and Turntable Health have both decided to close up shop, citing difficulties in securing funding to update services (eg, by offering a more urgent care-like level of care) and invest in technologies that would facilitate virtual care. Nonetheless, direct primary care continues to …

Read More