May 18, 2012

New Texas Law Expands Access to Safe and Affordable Care at Convenient Care Clinics

Legislation passed in Texas this year will, effective September 1, 2009, amend Texas law governing physician alternative practice sites, such as retail-based Convenient Care clinics. SB 532, supported by the Convenient Care Association and the Texas Medical Association, and sponsored by State Senator Dan Patrick (R-Houston) and Representative Garnet Coleman (D-Houston), increases Texans’ access to affordable health care while ensuring high standards for quality of care.

Convenient Care clinics are health care facilities located in high-traffic retail outlets with pharmacies. They are staffed by nurse practitioners and physician assistants who provide affordable, accessible, non-emergency care to consumers who otherwise might not be able to get it conveniently and at a low-cost.

SB 532 streamlines requirements for physicians who oversee the nurse practitioners and physician assistants working at Convenient Care clinics. This, in turn, reduces clinic costs without compromising quality of care or integration with the medical community, which is particularly important in Texas where 25 percent of the state’s resident’s are uninsured and 20 percent report having forgone medical care due to its high costs.

“Convenient Care clinics have treated millions of patients throughout the country and hundreds of thousands of patients in Texas over the last four years. The new law governing alternative practice sites helps ensure that these clinics will continue to provide easy access to affordable health care throughout the state,” said Tine Hansen-Turton, Executive Director of the Convenient Care Association.

“This new law ensures that physicians will continue to monitor convenient care clinics in order to protect patient safety, ensure positive health outcomes, and make certain that patients with more serious illnesses are referred for appropriate follow-up care,” said William H. Fleming III, MD, president of the Texas Medical Association.

Currently, four Convenient Care Association member companies operate clinics inside retail outlets in Texas.

  • MinuteClinic, in CVS/pharmacy stores
  • RediClinic, in H-E-B stores
  • Take Care Health Systems, in Walgreens pharmacies
  • CHRISTUS Medical Group, in Walmart stores

“While our nation argues how to overhaul the health care system, Texas continues making steady and strong steps toward meaningful reform. I’m proud to be a part of the effort for increasing access to quality health care,” said Senator Patrick. “It creates more opportunities for Texans to receive affordable, basic medical care in convenient retail locations, and as a result, it frees up physicians so they can spend more time treating patients with complex medical conditions.”

“Our state’s physician practices, urgent care clinics and emergency rooms are overburdened, resulting in excessive wait times and unnecessarily high costs for patients,” said Representative Coleman. “Allowing Convenient Care clinics to serve as accessible, affordable points of care for common family illnesses will help to relieve the stress on our health care system and reduce its cost.”

Source: EarthTimes

Physicians Prompt Care to expand into Jewel-Osco store

A suburban Chicago doctors group is resuscitating the physician-staffed model of retail medicine.

Physicians Prompt Care Centers of Tinley Park said it will open a clinic this month inside the Jewel-Osco at 9352 W. 159th St. in Orland Park that will be staffed by physicians. It’s the first retail health clinic in the Chicago area for Jewel-Osco parent Supervalu Inc., which has 14 retail clinics in its stores elsewhere in the country.

Though the number of retail health clinics has grown to more than 1,100 nationally, most are staffed by nurse practitioners, who are paid less than doctors. Just a half-dozen clinics are staffed by physicians.

About 800 clinics are operated by CVS Caremark Corp.’s MinuteClinic subsidiary and Walgreen Co.’s Take Care, said Tom Charland, chief executive of Merchant Medicine, a consulting firm that tracks retail clinic growth.

Jewel-Osco said it was not ruling out adding more Physicians Prompt Care Express retail clinics but would not elaborate.

“Our services can be helpful for individuals who are pressed for time, and for adults and children who do not have a regular physician or whose primary care physician is unavailable,” Dr. James Richardson, one of Physicians Prompt Care’s owners, said in a statement provided by Jewel-Osco. Richardson was unavailable for an interview.

Like other retail health clinics, Physicians Prompt Care says it treats a “variety of maladies, including coughs and colds, fractures, sprains, headaches and eye injuries.” Physicians Prompt Care also offers physical exams.

Costs for services for those paying out-of-pocket at nurse practitioner-staffed retail clinics run $55 to $75, compared with $100 or more for a visit to a primary-care physician’s office. Physicians Prompt Care said in a statement that it’s “still working on setting prices.”

Analysts say the cost of staffing retail clinics with doctors can hinder the physician retail model’s viability. The annual salary for a family physician or other primary-care doctor can range from $125,000 to $150,000, compared with $80,000 or more for a nurse practitioner, according to salary surveys.

The cost of operating the physician-staffed model of retail medicine was one reason Las Vegas-based Medical Marts, which operated three clinics in suburban Chicago, shuttered its operations last year.

After its financial backers decided to stop funding, Medical Marts ceased operations, closing clinics in Illinois, Missouri, Virginia and Utah. The company had been in business less than four years.

Physicians Prompt Care would not comment on how it is financing its retail clinic expansion plans.

Source: Chicago Tribune

MinuteClinic Offers New Rapid Pink-Eye Test; Detects Viral Conjunctivitis Infections in Minutes

MinuteClinic, the pioneer and largest provider of retail-based health care in the United States, is now offering a first-of-its kind rapid conjunctivitis (pink-eye) test at its 23 locations inside select CVS/pharmacy stores in the Atlanta area. The rapid test is a pilot project conducted in partnership with Rapid Pathogen Screening, Inc (RPS). MinuteClinic hopes to offer the test nationally at a future date in its clinic locations in 25 states.

The partnership makes the RPS Adeno Detector available to millions of Atlanta residents and allows MinuteClinic nurse practitioners to accurately diagnose whether a patient has viral or bacterial conjunctivitis. Practitioners can then identify a proper course of treatment and eliminate unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions when a viral condition exists.

“MinuteClinic patients will get on-the-spot results that provide a more precise pink-eye diagnosis,” said Donna Haugland, MinuteClinic Chief Nursing Officer. “This helps prevent the overuse of antibiotics and can lead to prescription savings.”

Conjunctivitis is an infectious — and frequently highly-contagious — condition that is most often caused by either a virus or bacteria. It is often spread among children in close environments such as schools, camps and recreational activities.

Until now, the accurate diagnosis and appropriate treatment of pink-eye has been difficult. While treatment with antibiotics is only necessary in 40 to 60 percent of cases, the majority of medical professionals prescribe antibiotics nearly 100 percent of the time. Indiscriminately prescribing antibiotics compounds the side effects associated with their overuse and increases patient resistance to these medications.

“Our goal was to develop new medical technology that improves patient outcomes and results in the highest level of care,” said Robert Sambursky, M.D., Chief Medical Officer for RPS. “The RPS Adeno Detector gives medical professionals a safe, convenient and affordable option to diagnose pink-eye.”

MinuteClinic health care centers are staffed by masters-prepared, board certified nurse practitioners who specialize in family health care and are trained to diagnose, treat and write prescriptions for common family illnesses such as strep throat and ear, eye, sinus, bladder and bronchial infections. Minor wounds, abrasions and joint sprains are treated, and common vaccinations such as influenza, tetanus, MMR, and Hepatitis A & B are available at all locations. In addition, MinuteClinic administers a series of wellness services designed to help consumers identify lifestyle changes needed to improve their current and future health, including screenings for diabetes, hypertension and obesity.

The cost for conjunctivitis treatment is $77. MinuteClinic is in-network with most major insurers in the Atlanta area, so patients are responsible for either their copay or the price clearly listed on the treatments and services menu. For those who are uninsured or prefer to pay out-of-pocket, MinuteClinic accepts cash, checks and credit cards.

Source: PR Newswire

Med-Point Express closes its doors today in Mishawaka

Today is the last day you can conveniently walk into the Mishawaka Wal-Mart and quickly get in to see a nurse practitioner for a cold, sore throat or physical.

After three years, Memorial Hospital and Health System is closing the Med-Point Express it opened nearly four years ago on Indian Ridge Boulevard.

It was a first for Memorial, which has become a hospital systems consultant to mainly not-for-profit groups opening express retail clinics.

And this particular location was a first for Wal-Mart, after the retail giant decided to test the concept in its stores, says Diane Stover, vice president for marketing and innovation strategy at Memorial in South Bend.

“We were happy to be the first in the country in the Wal-Mart model,” she says. “We were a national leader because we saw this was an improvement in access.

“We had a great three years at the Mishawaka Wal-Mart,” Stover adds, “but location-wise people have so many options.”

Patients on Friday were to receive a postcard in the mail directing them from now on to visit the nearby Main Street Med-Point or the Med-Point Express at Martin’s Super Markets, 936 Erskine Plaza, South Bend.

Memorial continues to operate Med-Point Express clinics at Wal-Mart stores in Valparaiso (1) and Indianapolis (3). It closed a Plymouth clinic last year.

The health system also runs an express clinic at the Cobblestone Crossing Martin’s store in Elkhart.

Initially, in-store clinics became popular for busy people and the uninsured because of their convenience and cost. The price for most visits is less than $70. Retail clinics offer treatment for common ailments such as upper respiratory infections and allergies, as well as physical exams and vaccinations mainly by nurse practitioners.

Stover said the typical retail clinic visit takes about 15 minutes, whereas it often takes an hour — or more — for a traditional Med-Point visit due to patient load and the greater number of ailments that can be treated by the physician on staff.

But national statistics show that the overall growth of retail clinics slowed in 2008, even as CVS, Walgreens and others add them.

In fact, the industry will not come anywhere near the 6,000-clinic figure some analysts predicted for 2011, according to Merchant Medicine, a Minnesota-based retail clinic consultancy firm.

Indiana has such walk-in retail clinics as The Little Clinic, inside Kroger grocery stores, MinuteClinic, which is operated by CVS Caremark, and Corner Care Clinic.

Some Meijer stores also offered in-store clinics for a short time in Indiana and Michigan.

Stover said Memorial will continue looking for suitable locations to improve access to health care with retail clinics. But she agrees the number of clinics will continue to retract before the number greatly expands.

“There have been failed attempts at this business all over the country,” Stover says. “Because we were one of the first hospital systems in the country to do this, we’ve watched many mistakes be made and helped people avoid them. We’re taking what we’ve learned and are applying it for future planning.”

Source: South Bend Tribune

Retail Clinic Route Best Low-Cost Care?

Are doctors’ visits getting too expensive for you?

You may want to try out a low-cost option known as a retail health clinic, found in a growing number of pharmacies, as people seek medical treatment on-the-fly.

Staffed by nurse practicitioners, these clinics offer treatment for minor health problems when a patient can’t get an appointment or afford to go to a doctor or hospital.

Retail health clinics are available at pharmacies, such as CVS and Walgreens, as well as supermarkets like Kroger and Publix, and may be a way for some to get medical help in the down economy.

But are these clinics are a reliable place for medical care?

“Early Show” co-anchor Maggie Rodriguez posed that question to CBS News medical correspondent Dr. Jennifer Ashton.

“The buyer has to be beware,” Ashton told “Early Show” co-anchor Maggie Rodriguez Monday. “The patient has to use the same amount of caution as if looking for a doctor.”

Ashton said clinics like these usually offer very basic evaluation and treatment for minor health issues such as urinary tract infections, throat or ear infections, or minor skin infections. These clinics, she said, are meant ot treat minor ailments. For simple issues, she said, the knowledge of a nurse practitioner is satisfactory.

Ashton said charges vary, but can start at $60 — without tests or medications — while most doctors visits start at $100. Ashton pointed out that, even during a doctor visit, patients aren’t seen by the doctor the entire visit.

Although retail clinics were started on a cash-only basis (and still accept cash), many now accept insurance.

But who should — and shouldn’t — use them?

Ashton said patients who are generally healthy and don’t have a regular physician should use clinics for a minor problem. The clinics may also be a good alternative, she said, for people who are traveling and/or can’t get in touch with their regular health care provider.

However, people with one or more chronic medical conditions, those with a complicated medical history, and those who have their own physician, she said, shouldn’t use the low-cost clinics.

What should you do when you visit a low-cost retail clinic?

Ashton’s recommendations:

  1. Know your own medical history.
  2. Bring a list of all medications.
  3. Get a phone number in case things worsen.
  4. Follow-up with your regular provider or arrange follow-up.

Ashton added patients should also get a record of their visit to the clinic to know what tests were done, what medications were recommended, and what type of medical professional saw you. She also suggested retaining a copy of all records.

Ashton said if you want to use a retail clinic, you should weigh the pros and cons.

These clinics are not for everyone, she said. The clinics may even receive financial incentives, she said, to prescribe medications if they are associated with the pharmacy. Also the nurse practitioner may not have the same medical knowledge as a physician.

Source: CBS News

Walgreens clinics to test diabetes treatment program

In the latest effort to expand its retail clinic business into specialized services,  Walgreen Co. confirmed plans to launch a pilot program to treat the growing number of Americans with diabetes, a key driver of higher health-care costs.

Drugstore giant Walgreens’ Take Care clinics and CVS Caremark Corp.’s MinuteClinic subsidiary are this year rolling out specialized services that go beyond treating routine maladies.

Launched about four years ago, the retail clinics have treated such ailments as ear and sinus infections, strep throat and pink eye. Retail clinic operators have started training nurses to handle more specialized care, including injections for chronic conditions like osteoporosis and asthma. They also are offering treatments for advanced skin conditions that include removal of warts and skin tags or closing minor wounds.

Care for minor sprains and strains also is available at some retailers, and pilot programs are under way for breathing treatments and special infusions of drugs derived from biotechnology.

This week, Walgreens Chief Executive  Greg Wasson said on the company’s third-quarter earnings call that it will expand its offerings for chronic conditions like Type 2 diabetes. He would not disclose the locations.

About 90 percent of those with diabetes have the Type 2 variety, when a patient’s body does not produce enough insulin or does not use it effectively. People with Type 1 diabetes produce very little to no insulin.

“In coming quarters, we’ll pilot a chronic-care management service in four markets focused initially on Type 2 diabetes,” Wasson said. “The service will integrate capabilities across all of our platforms including pharmacies, retail clinics, call centers and mail service to enable patients to better control their condition.”

Diabetes is becoming one of the nation’s top health-care concerns and is regularly mentioned by President Barack Obama and members of Congress as a key area for improvement if medical costs are going to be wrestled under control.

Direct and indirect costs of diabetes to the U.S. health-care system are more than $130 billion a year and include emergency-room visits, extended hospital stays and absenteeism, Chicago-based Midwest Business Group on Health said, citing national studies.

Retail clinics not only market themselves as a convenience, they also can be less expensive, providing a competitive threat to primary-care doctors and even specialists. Costs for services for those paying out of pocket at retail clinics generally run $55 to $75, compared with $100 or more for a visit to a primary-care physician.

Source: Chicago Tribune

More lured to retail clinics for a quick fix

At walk-in MinuteClinics, patients suffering from common illnesses and minor injuries — such as the flu, ear infections, rashes, bronchitis and poison ivy — are treated by nurse practitioners. They are open nights and weekends and serve as an alternative to visiting primary care physicians or emergency rooms.

Jyoti Peters just moved from Michigan to Cambridge and does not have a local doctor yet. Peters said she’s been curious about MinuteClinics, and when she woke up yesterday with pink eye, she stopped at the Porter Square location to get checked out.

“I needed to come someplace fast because I had to pick up my son at 1 p.m.,” Peters said.

The CVS subsidiary has opened up 500 locations in 25 states, but none are slated for Boston. In the fall, Mayor Thomas Menino opposed the clinics, and yesterday, Barbara Ferrer, head of the Boston Public Health Commission, said the city is committed instead to its robust network of teaching hospitals and 26 community health centers as the best treatment facilities for Hub patients.

Health experts have voiced concerns over whether the clinics present the safest option for patients, as well.

Source: Metro.us

MinuteClinic Case Study

Together, NAS Recruitment Communications and MinuteClinic discovered how to position MinuteClinic as the “best place to work” for qualified Family Nurse Practitioners across the country.

To read the entire case study, please click here.

Source: NASRecruitment.com

Wal-Mart Medical Clinics Stumble

Two years ago, Wal-Mart Stores announced plans to have retail medical clinics in 400 of its stores by 2010 and said it saw the potential for as many as 2,000. By February 2008, the retailer had 78 clinics. But now,—after failed venture-capital collaborations, a few faulty partnerships, and a reassessment of the business model—it has only 31.

For a company known for its retail acumen and dominance, that retrenchment illustrates the complicated nature of incorporating basic-care facilities into a big-box business model. Americans have shown increased interest in retail medical clinics, which are typically open seven days a week and operate until as late as 8 p.m. According to the Convenient Care Assn., a trade organization, visits doubled nationally between 2007 and April 2009, to 14% of the population from 7%. The retailing behemoth, however, is still formulating an appropriate model. “Wal-Mart is not a drugstore. I’m not surprised that there would be false starts,” says Candace Corlett, president of consultancy WSL Strategic Retail. Pharmacy chains, meanwhile, have seized a large swath of the retail clinic market.

Still, Wal-Mart sees plenty of opportunity and says it remains on track to have 400 clinics within the next few years to take advantage of growth in the field.
medical mcdonald’s

Wal-Mart collects a brand fee and income from renting space to the clinic operators—and uses its massive buying clout to buy equipment for them—but it holds no ownership stake in the clinics. These offices, also known as “convenient care” clinics, are typically staffed by nurse practitioners or physician assistants and offer basic treatments for common ailments such as strep throat, sinus infections, and rashes.

Clinics mesh basic care with a retail philosophy that stresses convenience and savings. Prices are usually displayed on menu boards. Visits typically cost $45 to $75, not including prescriptions. The clinics perform physicals, drug tests, blood work, and other noninvasive screenings without the lengthy waits, high prices, and hefty paperwork often associated with hospitals. For more serious cases, the clinics refer patients to a doctor or emergency room. The goal is to “simplify, like a Starbucks or a McDonald’s,” says Karen Bowling, CEO of Solantic, a Jacksonville, (Fla.)-based company that operates 26 clinics, three of them in Wal-Mart stores.

Wal-Mart isn’t alone in searching for a profitable business model in an industry that is striving for greater awareness and traffic. Retail clinics need customer traffic to cover their $500,000 to $600,000 yearly operating costs. With each visit bringing an average of $59 to $80, a clinic requires roughly 20 patients per day to break even and 30 to turn a healthy profit. Walgreens subsidiary Take Care Health Systems, for example, operates more than 345 offices and sees patients as young as 18 months. By expanding its hours and services, Take Care Health had estimated sales of $450,000 per location in 2008, according to Kalorama Information, which publishes health-care market research. “I think the challenge in [making the clinics] profitable is as simple as getting to the point where you have an adequate amount of consumer awareness,” says Chip Phillips, president of MinuteClinic, which has 500 retail clinics in 25 states and operates as a unit of drugstore chain CVS Caremark.

location, location, location

Wal-Mart has more than 1 million potential clients among its employees alone, and it is betting that the combination of rising health-care costs and consistent traffic from budget-minded shoppers will prove successful. However, the enterprise has been marked by early stumbles and is taking longer than expected to develop. Industry experts and clinic operators cite brand confusion, advertising problems, broken partnerships, and the recession as factors in Wal-Mart’s halting foray in the field.

Location is key, too. Freestanding retail clinics operating out of strip malls draw attention from auto traffic or public transportation stops. Solantic, for example, sees more business at such locations, and especially at its Orlando International Airport site. Wal-Mart’s clinics, however, are typically situated inside near the store’s main doors—along the same row as its photo studios and Subway sandwich shops—rather than near its pharmacies, and may catch a consumer’s eye only on the way out. Plus, the company doesn’t allow signage directly outside the store to promote the clinics and restricts indoor signs to areas near the clinic offices, says Natassia Orr, administrator of Broward Health Weston in Weston, Fla. At Wal-Mart, “the challenge is from an awareness perspective,” Solantic’s Bowling says.

The retailing giant does run in-store TV advertising and promotions on walmart.com, and is “working with our existing clinic operators to determine how we can better communicate to our customers about the benefits of clinics,” company spokeswoman Christi Gallagher says.

As unlikely as Wal-Mart’s foray may seem, its venture into the clinic business comes as no surprise to Paul Keckley, executive director of the Deloitte Center for Health Solutions in Stamford, Conn. “Think of it not as running a clinic but running a health-care services organization,” he says. The company already provides prescription drugs, including increasingly popular generics, and medical products. By incorporating clinics, Wal-Mart offers consumers yet another reason to come inside, and increases its potential indirect revenue. Kalorama publisher Bruce Carlson estimates that for every 70 clinics, a big-box store can pull in $13.5 million a year in indirect sales. “Initially, it looked like the box stores were going to be the entities that were going to really have a lot of these clinics,” he says.

drugstores capture clinic market

Instead, brands already known for their drugstores—CVS, Walgreens, and Rite-Aid—have captured the bulk of the market. By the end of 2008 there were 934 retail clinics in drugstore chains, or more than 20 times the number in Wal-Mart stores, according to Kalorama research. Carlson estimates there will be more than 1,000 in drugstores by 2010, but only about 70 in big-box stores. Broward Health closed its pair of Express Aid locations earlier this year after treating an average of five patients a day since opening the clinics in early 2008. “The easy part was providing health care. That’s what we do,” says Orr.

Unlike the subsidiary relationship many drugstores have with their clinics, Wal-Mart operates on a landlord/tenant basis with its retail operators. While clinics at CVS or Walgreens can lean on their partners during tough times, tenants cannot. “Certainly, some of the operators were affected by the downward economy,” says Tine Hansen-Turton, executive director of the Philadelphia-based Convenient Care Assn.

Many locations that faltered were networks of venture-capital enterprises. Wal-Mart requires its independent operators to hire health professionals to deliver care, says Mary Kate Scott, founder and CEO of Scott & Co., a health-care consultancy. For venture capitalists looking to invest in a rapidly profitable business, running a co-branded clinic with two partners is a difficult proposition. “When you don’t deliver the service or own the brand or own the space, you have almost nothing,” Scott says. “Essentially, the investors lost with the Wal-Mart strategy.”

In January 2008, nascent clinic operator CheckUps closed its 23 Wal-Mart locations across the South after failing to raise enough money. Then in June, Colorado-based SmartCare Family Medical Centers shuttered all 15 of its in-store businesses. RediClinic, whose largest investor is AOL co-founder Steve Case’s Revolution Health Group, parted ways with Wal-Mart in December, shelving plans for 200 co-branded clinics nationwide. The company also has clinics in 21 Texas grocery stores. RediClinics declined to comment about its business partnerships.
new partners

Insiders aren’t overly concerned with Wal-Mart’s false start. “Remember, we’re still very much a young industry,” says Hansen-Turton. “The beauty of a young industry is that you can try different models.” With patient visits rising and satisfaction surveys showing high marks, retail clinics are confident they’ll succeed. According to a 2008 Wall Street Journal/Harris study, 90% of adults were satisfied with the quality of care they received at clinics, 88% were satisfied with staff qualifications, and 86% were satisfied with the cost.

After hiccups with independent operators, Wal-Mart plans to increase collaboration with established medical providers. Gallagher says more than 400 hospitals and health systems are trying to open sites in the retailer’s stores. Janet Teske, a nurse practitioner and manager of Quick Care clinics in six Wisconsin Wal-Marts, says she’s benefited from the relationship. The clinics are part of the larger Aurora Health Care network of hospitals and health-care service providers in the state and retail clinics act as an outpost. Visits to Quick Care clinics have tripled over the past year, to between 20 and 40 people per day. By partnering with a health-care system like Quick Care, Wal-Mart can provide patients backup when they need further medical care. Retail clinics also give emergency rooms a release valve for heavy traffic, especially during flu season.

With plans for clinics across the country, Wal-Mart says it will seek continuity through its branding and electronic medical records. Store façades will say “The Clinic at Wal-Mart” and display the name of a local hospital system, offering both the credibility of established health-care systems and the low-price attraction of the Wal-Mart brand. Keckley, of the Deloitte research center, is confident that Wal-Mart’s partnerships with hospitals, coupled with the business of its pharmacy and health-care departments, will prove successful. “They’re not stupid,” he says. “They see the spending curve on health care.”

Source: BusinessWeek

Economy, flu drive patients to walk-in clinics

As more Arizonans face unemployment and lost health insurance, mini clinics are gaining in popularity.

Grocery stores, drug stores and even an insurance company are getting into the business.

Cigna HealthCare of Arizona Inc.’s medical practice group recently opened its sixth CareToday Clinic in the Valley. It’s in the Anthem Crossroads shopping center at Daisy Mountain Drive and Gavilan Peak Parkway.

Kurt Weimer, president and general manager of Cigna HealthCare of Arizona, said he plans to open two more clinics in outlying areas of the Valley within the next few months.

Weimer said the clinics are good for Valley hospitals because they help alleviate unnecessary traffic in emergency rooms, notably during the recent swine flu scare. The first five CareToday clinics saw a 24 percent increase in patient volume during the first week of the swine flu outbreak, he said.

Cigna is the only insurance company to get into the mini clinic business so far, Weimer said, probably because it’s the only insurance provider that operates a medical group. Cigna Medical Group maintains 25 offices in the Valley, including three urgent care centers and six CareToday clinics.

Several years ago, Cigna tried to duplicate its medical group practice model in other states, but the company was never able to reach the same critical mass, Weimer said.

“To re-create Cigna Medical Group would be so expensive that it would be problematic for anybody to do it on scale,” he said.

To meet the demand, Walgreen Co., CVS Caremark and other drug store chains have purchased mini clinic businesses and are opening clinics inside their stores nationwide.

Woonsocket, R.I.-based CVS operates 560 MinuteClinics in its stores in 27 states, logging more than 2 million patient visits since their inception in 2000. Of the 128 CVS stores in Arizona, CVS has 10 MinuteClinics in the Phoenix and Tucson areas.

“Clearly, the concept of walk-in clinics in various retail formats, as well as on a stand-alone basis, has caught on,” said Jim Hertel, publisher of the Arizona Managed Care Newsletter. “I think they all have a place in the market. There is a marketing development curve going on now as they are working harder and harder to publicize their existence, and to attract patients away from the hospital emergency rooms and traditional medical practice.”

Achieving sufficient volume

But, he said, it’s going to be awhile before they can build enough volume to enjoy significant financial success because their prices are so low: $59 per patient visit.

“That’s why you’ve seen the closure of some of the clinics in areas where the clientele was not sufficient to support the type of clinic that was being offered in that market,” Hertel said.

In March, Avondale-based MediMin Inc. closed all four of its mini clinics in Bashas’-owned grocery stores to conserve cash flow, said Rob Tofil, president and CEO of MediMin. It had clinics in two Bashas’ stores, one Food City and one Ike’s Farmers’ Market.

“The economy hurt our business from an investment point of view, even though the patient counts were getting stronger,” Tofil said. “We also increased the services we provided compared to the competition.”

He said MediMin’s shutdown is temporary: He is in the process of completing a partnership with a “major player” that will allow him to reopen the clinics this fall.

“We are also still looking for other potential partners,” he said.

Meanwhile, Bashas’ officials plan to reopen in-store clinics with a new partner, said Kristy Nied, director of communications for the local chain.

“We’re working with a new partner that will be exclusive to us to come in and operate those clinics,” she said.

Negotiations are ongoing, so Nied was unable to identify the company, except to say that it’s local.

“It’s going to happen,” she said. “It’s just a matter of timing.”

A model that works

Dr. John Shufeldt, an emergency room physician who has built NextCare Urgent Care to 55 facilities in six states, said he looked into providing the mini clinic model about three or four years ago. At the time, he couldn’t see how a mini clinic could make money by charging only $59 or $69 a patient.

As in many other fields, only certain business models seem to thrive.

When a separate company, such as MediMin, tries to operate a clinic within a store, it needs to produce high volume to be profitable, Shufeldt said. On the other hand, Walgreens and CVS can use those clinics as loss leaders, drawing customers into their drug stores to buy prescriptions and other items.

Nancy Zaner, Southwest regional nurse practitioner for Take Care Health System, said the mini clinic model makes sense in the current economy. Take Care is a wholly owned subsidiary of Deerfield, Ill.-based Walgreen Co.

“We are able to provide affordable, quality care built around patients’ needs, regardless if somebody has been laid off,” she said. “It’s still more affordable than a lot of ER deductibles.”

Take Care has 343 clinics in Walgreens stores nationwide, including 19 in the Valley and nine in Tucson. She said the company is looking at further expansion in the Valley, but has not determined the number or locations.

Take Care employs 74 people in the Valley and 34 in Tucson.

“We are seeing an increase in our numbers this time of year,” Zamer said. “Patients are seeking affordable options for their health care. We are seeing patients who’ve either lost their jobs or have a higher deductible to meet.”

The mini clinics are getting competitive in their pricing this summer. Take Care is offering $30 physicals through September, while Cigna’s CareToday Clinics are offering $29 first-visit specials and $25 camp and sports physicals.

“We’re not looking to replace the role of primary care physicians,” Weimer said. “The clinics are designed for low-acuity care, and not ongoing care. It’s 15 minutes in and out. This is designed for convenience.”

Source: Phoenix Business Journal

Retail health clinics may be a passing fad

As Joni Mitchell once sang, “You don’t know what you’ve got till it’s gone.”

I finally got the chance to visit a retail clinic in a neighborhood grocery store and now I’m learning they may be nothing more than a passing fad.

Even though I’ve been reporting on the growth of the retail clinic market for several years, they’ve only recently begun sprouting here in Colorado. So when my 19-year-old niece, who has been staying with me, fell ill on a weekend, I jumped at the chance to take her to the Little Clinic, which had just opened in nearby Wheat Ridge.

The Little Clinic is the third-largest U.S. retail clinic vendor, with 96 locations in nine states. The market leaders are MinuteClinic, which is owned by CVS Corp. and operates 461 clinics in 24 states, and TakeCare, a unit of Walgreen Co. that has 343 clinics in 18 states.

Although this market had been growing rapidly, the expansion slowed last year, and some industry observers say the deceleration may be a sign of a market contraction.

The June issue of Merchant Medicine News, an online newsletter that covers the retail clinic market, reported retail clinic vendors are disappointed with their financial performance and, in many cases, are closing them. Altogether, 1,111 retail clinics are operating today, compared with 1,118 in May. Since Jan. 1, 64 retail clinics have been shuttered.

The nurse practitioner at the Little Clinic we visited said she only recently started working there after the previous clinic where she worked closed.

Did they pull the plug too soon? It depends on whom you ask.

Proponents of retail clinics describe them as a “disruptive innovation” that provides a simpler and more affordable alternative to expensive urgent care centers, hospital emergency rooms and many doctors’ offices.

The Little Clinic we visited was basically a large cubicle with four walls and a locking door, but no ceiling. Inside, however, it had all the basic medical accoutrements —an examination table, a sink, vials of cotton swabs and tongue depressors, and a desk. Before the exam, we sat in a rudimentary “waiting room” of three straight-back chairs and a folding table situated adjacent to the store pharmacy and across the aisle from cosmetics.

But the exam itself was no different than a more expensive venue except that it lasted longer—a lot longer. After taking a throat and nasal culture to test for strep and influenza, the nurse spent considerable time describing the possible causes of my niece’s illness and alternate cures, the majority of which focused on home care rather than prescription medications. Altogether, the examination and consultation took nearly 45 minutes, compared with the standard doctor’s office visit of about 10 minutes.

When I asked my niece her impressions, she said she couldn’t recall ever spending that much time in any other doctor’s office, and that none had ever explained things so thoroughly. As for the convenience, she said she was happy she didn’t have to wait until Monday to see her regular doctor and that the clinic accepted her insurance.

Ay, there’s the rub.

Although some experts believe the retail clinic industry wouldn’t have gotten as big as quickly had it not been for insurance reimbursement, critics say retail clinics are losing their competitive edge by becoming part of insurer preferred provider networks. They say if retail clinics had remained non-network providers and operated on a cash-only basis, they could charge less, provide more services, and create real competition.

All this may be moot, however, depending on what form of health reform is enacted. Sources close to the debate say lawmakers haven’t even considered a role for retail clinics. But I believe clinics could increase access to primary care while keeping health care costs in check.

Source: Business Insurance

Study: ‘Minute clinics’ fail to catch on in Mass.

Retail clinics, or so-called minute health clinics, at CVS and other retailers are becoming an increasingly popular option for patients who want to avoid going to a doctor or an emergency room for routine illnesses like a cold.

But a new study by the consultancy firm Deloitte has found that people in Boston are statistically less willing to use this new alternative health care option.

The percentage of patients who were likely to use a retail clinic if it cost half as much as a doctor visit was 30 percent nationwide, but only 21 percent in Boston. The percentage of patients that have actually used a retail walk in clinic in the past year was 13 percent nationwide and only 5 percent in Boston.

Even a one week wait for a doctor would not entice very many Bostonians to go to a retail clinic: just 18 percent of Bostonians said that would make them change their behavior, compared with 28 percent nationwide.

The newly-released study was conducted in October of 2008, and included 5,665 subjects nationwide.

Source: Boston Business Journal