May 18, 2012

Walgreen, CVS add healthcare services to in-store clinics

Amid the economic downturn and slow growth for retail and outpatient medical care services, pharmacy giants Walgreen Co. and CVS Caremark Corp. are rolling out new specialized services at their in-store clinics, going beyond treatment of routine maladies.

Launched over the last four years to care for such simple ailments as ear and sinus infections, strep throat or pinkeye, retail clinic operators now are training nurses to do specialized injections for such chronic conditions as osteoporosis and asthma.

In addition, they 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 being offered at some retailers, and pilot projects are underway for breathing treatments and special infusions of drugs derived from biotechnology.

“We want to create a health corner — a real center that looks like you are walking into the doctor’s office,” Walgreen Chief Executive Greg Wasson said of the retailer’s Take Care brand clinics.

There is a business reason for adding services. Walgreens and CVS have slowed their expansion of clinics and are instead making attempts to boost revenue by adding new lines of business in their clinics.

Typically staffed by advanced-degree nurses known as practitioners, most of the nation’s more than 1,100 retail health clinics are open seven days a week, with no appointment needed. The model has been greeted by health insurers, employers and consumer groups as one way to address the rising number of uninsured Americans, estimated at more than 46 million.

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.

The physician community says consumers should look at the added services by clinics with skepticism, particularly when it comes to care for chronic ailments. And doctors say what a consumer may see as routine may turn out to be something worse.

“A sprain could be a muscle tear or a break, for crying out loud, so how does a [retail] clinic know when the patient comes in that they are going to treat a sprain?” said Dr. James Milam, president of the Illinois State Medical Society. “When my nurse gives an injection, I am here. The patient needs a regular doctor who has a history with the patient, knows their history, their family history and their illnesses.”

But retailers say they are not going beyond “scope of practice” laws that regulate what nurse practitioners can and cannot do. The clinics are under physicians’ supervision, though doctors usually are not on site.

“These are new services we were not providing that our customers asked us to provide,” said Chip Phillips, president of MinuteClinic, a CVS subsidiary. “We are slowly and gradually expanding our services.”

MinuteClinic said this spring that it had added treatments for sprains, acne, wound care, motion sickness and testing for tuberculosis. In Columbus, Ohio, CVS’ MinuteClinics are piloting a program to provide asthma patients with nebulizer breathing treatments.

In Tampa and Orlando, Fla., Walgreens has launched a pilot program to provide injections for patients with asthma and osteoporosis.

“A high percentage of new drug development is targeted toward biologics that will require clinical administration,” Walgreens spokesman Michael Polzin said.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc., which works with several outside companies to staff clinics in its stores, has remained focused on “providing the stay-well and get-well services that we have always done, such as ear infections, soar throats and bladder infections,” said Christi Gallagher, a Wal-Mart spokeswoman, adding that the company is “always looking for ways to better serve our customers.”

Source: Los Angeles Times

Health Care in a Hurry

Ever get knocked in the shins by a shopping cart while you’re waiting for a medical treatment? These days, it’s becoming more of a distinct possibility. Retail health clinics are quietly sprouting up around the nation at local drugstores and supermarkets, often tucked in a corner just past the mouthwash and Flintstones Vitamins.

With the battered economy putting more pressure on people’s ability to cover health costs, and the ranks of primary-care physicians dwindling, analysts say these clinics could become a nifty niche for U.S. drugstores (CVS pharmacy, Walgreens), supermarkets (Kroger, Cub Foods) and big-box chains (Wal-Mart, Target), which have shoehorned about 1,100 of them into stores. Indeed, while their growth has slowed lately, the number of clinics shot up tenfold between 2006 and 2008 alone, drawing nearly four times as many customers over the same time period.

One major drawing card, of course, is price: They’re cheaper than doctors. (A handful of store-based clinics are staffed by physicians; more typically, it’s nurse-practitioners, masters-educated nurses with the ability in most states to write prescriptions.) The Deloitte Center for Health Solutions recently found that a typical clinic visit costs between $50 and $75, compared with $55 to $250 for a physician. One clinic even recently announced that it would waive sick-visit fees through 2009 for anyone who can prove that they are both unemployed and uninsured.

The main reason people go this route, though, is to save time. With names like MinuteClinic and Curaquick, these facilities promise vaccines, simple screenings and treatment for routine illnesses, like ear infections or pinkeye, with Jiffy Lube speed and convenience. In fact, while most doctors still live by the 9-to-5 credo, retail clinics offer evening and weekend hours that work better with Americans’ hectic schedules. And most take major insurance.

Still, despite promises of shorter waits, some clinics can have long lines or such strict treatment limitations that patients often leave frustrated. Physicians have raised concerns about whether store clinicians can know enough about their patients’ medical histories with such brief contact, especially those with multiple chronic conditions, like diabetes and depression.

And with only about half of U.S. in-store clinics currently profitable—and some drug chains deriving nearly 70 percent of their revenue from the pharmacy counter—critics wonder whether the clinics might lean toward overprescribing meds, a charge the chains deny. CVS pharmacy’s MinuteClinics, for one, says its protocol is not to prescribe antibiotics unless a patient meets a strict list of preconditions; for a sinus infection, for instance, you’d need to have been sick with symptoms like “yellow or green drainage” for seven days and unresponsive to over-the-counter drugs.

Clinic champions, however, remain bullish. “Years from now,” says Tine Hansen-Turton, head of the Convenient Care Association, an industry trade group, “we’ll say the clinics made Americans healthier because they let patients get care earlier in their illnesses, on their schedules.” Unsure what to expect, we decided to give this new trend a tryout, shopping our own minor ailments around these minuscule medical facilities.

As we pull into the strip mall in Riverside, Conn., we have no trouble finding the large MinuteClinic sign above the CVS pharmacy entrance. But inside is another story. The clinic is stashed in a far corner of the store; even standing 10 feet away, we miss it—until the pharmacist points out a nondescript door and, next to it, a small check-in kiosk.
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Nearby, a flat-screen TV displays something we’ve never seen in a lifetime of doctor visits: a price list for the clinic’s 30-plus services. There are treatments for routine ailments like strep throat ($77), bladder infections ($67) and swimmer’s ear ($62), as well as wellness offerings like camp physicals ($59) and cholesterol screening ($45).

Checking in on a quiet weeknight around 7 p.m., we have the place to ourselves, so the nurse-practitioner ushers us right in for our flu shot. The clinic turns out to be roughly the size of a small kitchen pantry (85 square feet), with few trappings of a medical office—no visible exam table and no eye charts. Instead, there are a few plastic chairs, a supply cabinet and a desk, on which sit a computer and a bottle of hand sanitizer.

And while this location has a small sink, not every MinuteClinic does. Donna Jeskey, then operations manager for MinuteClinic’s New Jersey locations, says, “Using hand sanitizer between each visit, like our nurses do, is just as safe—if not safer—for the patient.” Still, the company says it is currently in the process of retrofitting all of its clinics with sinks.

As our nurse gives the syringe a preparatory flick, she tells us how busy she’s been, administering 50 flu shots alone the day before. Turns out, the majority of the company’s fall and winter business comes from flu shots—a service it aggressively promotes in stores with frequent loudspeaker ads and cardboard placards hanging over nearly every aisle.

To our delight, she also informs us that our insurance fully covers the $30 vaccine. “Nice insurance,” she says. “Do you work for a hedge fund?” Then she flits over to the pharmacy to chat up customers waiting for prescriptions. “I can take a look at your cold,” she offers.

At Take Care Clinics, tucked inside more than 340 Walgreens drugstores, CEO Peter Miller says the biggest challenge is long lines, sometimes stretching almost two hours at popular locations. And it turns out he isn’t kidding. Having developed a sore throat and fever the day after a major holiday, when most doctors’ offices are clamped up tight, we drive to the nearest Take Care Clinic, located on a busy commercial strip in suburban St. Louis. When we get there, the check-in kiosk announces a full two-and-a-half-hour wait.

Had we known that we could, we’d have called ahead to the company’s toll-free number to get the wait time and put our name in the queue. The company says it also staffs some clinics with a “concierge” to manage backups, but on this day there’s none in sight—just a nurse-practitioner pulling double duty. Between patients, she comes to the reception desk, takes our cell phone number and offers to call 15 minutes before she can see us (which she does). At least we don’t end up trapped with the usual collection of magazines.

Once inside the clinic, it feels like a doctor’s office. We find ourselves oddly comforted by the front-and-center exam table, the standing scale and wall-mounted blood-pressure cuff. After taking a fairly detailed history and examining us, the nurse asks what antibiotics we usually take, since we get frequent sinus infections; she then prescribes a different one, explaining that it will keep us from developing a drug resistance.

Two days later, following Take Care protocol, she calls to see how we are feeling and ask if we need additional information or a doctor referral. (The company’s clinicians get bonuses, in part, based on customer satisfaction ratings.) That follow-up is one way that, CEO Miller says, “we’re putting the patient first during every part of the process.” Of course, the company’s not above a little up-selling. Before we leave the office, the nurse suggests we consider a neti pot—one of Oprah’s favorite sinus remedies, she says. “It’s in aisle 10C.”

Source: SmartMoney

Retail clinics serve wealthier neighborhoods – study

While seen as a way to improve health-care access for the poor and uninsured, retail clinics in the United States tend to be clustered in higher-income neighborhoods, researchers said on Monday.

Located in grocery stores and retail chains such as Walgreen Co, CVS Caremark and Wal-Mart Stores Inc, retail clinics offer convenient, walk-in hours for flu shots, treatment of sore throats and other basic services.

They have taken off since 2000, and there are now roughly 1,000 of them in the nation.

“Poorer neighborhoods are less likely to have access to these clinics,” Dr. Craig Pollack of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine said in a statement following a study of 1,000 such clinics.

Using mapping software and Census data, Pollack and his colleagues found that the clinics were located in areas with a lower population of black residents, lower poverty rates, and higher median incomes than areas without retail clinics.

“They are significantly less likely to be located in poor or underserved neighborhoods,” he added.

Although fiercely opposed by some U.S. physician groups, the clinics are showing signs of being integrated into the U.S. health system. Marquee hospital chains including the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio and Mayo Clinic in Minnesota have begun partnering with clinics run by Wal-Mart Stores.

Retail chain operators have said the clinics may improve access to care for uninsured or underserved people, and clinic operators and some doctors see them as a potential solution to a serious national shortage of primary care doctors.

Pollack said recent studies have suggested that the clinics are less costly than physician-based practices because they offer limited range of services, and they are also more likely to be used by people who do not have a regular doctor.

That may help those in poor areas who have less access to insurance and are less likely to see a regular doctor.

“By tending to locate in richer neighborhoods, retail clinics may not be meeting their full potential to help address these problems,” he said.

Given the shortage of primary care doctors, Pollack said municipalities may want to consider offering incentives for clinics to open up in poorer, underserved neighborhoods.

Tine Hansen-Turton, executive director of the Convenient Care Association, an industry group that represents retail clinics, said the clinics were not devised to be part of the health care safety net.

“Convenient care clinics are niche providers, providing a relatively limited set of services in a manner that is cost-effective, transparent, and convenient, while maintaining a strong commitment to clinical quality,” Hansen-Turton said in an e-mail.

But she added “there is a very real possibility” that clinics might expand to more populations and forge partnerships with state and local governments to treat more underserved patients.

Peter Miller, president and chief executive of Take Care Health Systems, which operates clinics in Walgreens pharmacies, said 20 to 30 percent of clinic customers pay in cash and are uninsured or underinsured.

Some 30 percent do not have a primary care provider, and more than 40 percent say if it were not for the clinic, they would have gone to an emergency department, an urgent care clinic or might not have sought treatment at all, he added.

Source: Reuters

Health Care Marketplace | More Walk-In Clinics Affiliated With Hospitals, Medical Centers

The number of hospitals in the U.S. that are affiliated with walk-in clinics in large retail chains, such as Wal-Mart or CVS, is rising, as hospitals view the collaborations as a means of expanding their business, the New York Times reports. There currently are more than 1,000 such clinics in the U.S. Although few of the clinics, which began appearing in 2005, were initially affiliated with hospitals or medical centers, one in 10 now holds connections to such facilities, according to Merchant Medicine. According to the Times, many more of the clinics are planned. The Times reports that more than 25 Wal-Mart clinics currently are affiliated with hospitals, including the Christus Medical Group in Texas, Aurora Health Care in Wisconsin and CoxHealth in Missouri. The Cleveland Clinic and the Mayo Clinic also have joined with similar retail clinics, after employees and patients expressed an interest in expedient treatment for minor medical conditions.

Clinics’ Value

Hospital retail clinics typically are staffed by nurse practitioners or physician assistants and supervised by physicians remotely. The clinics often operate at a relatively low cost compared with primary care doctors’ offices or emergency departments, according to the Times. The clinics typically only serve insured patients or those who can fully pay for the service, unlike EDs, where it is illegal to turn away patients based on their ability to pay. In addition, the clinics help clear hospital EDs of people seeking basic medical care. Retail clinics also offer marketing opportunities for hospitals, helping to create relationships with customers who eventually might need more profitable in-hospital care. The Times reports that while many primary care physicians still consider retail clinics as “cheap, unworthy competitors,” hospitals say they provide a vital public service during the current economic recession. Hospitals also say that the clinics provide access for patients amid a decline in the number of primary care physicians in the U.S. (Freudenheim [1], New York Times, 5/12).

Wal-Mart Rebuilding Clinic Business With Hospitals

In related news, Wal-Mart currently is attempting to rebuild its medical clinic business after 51 of its 78 clinics closed by the end of 2008, the Times reports. Wal-Mart had said it planned to have 400 walk-in clinics in operation by 2010, but the plan “went into reverse” in December 2008 when RediClinic — a privately held company tasked with “a big role” in the project — unexpectedly closed its 15 Wal-Mart centers, the Times reports. Wal-Mart now is looking to reopen many of its clinics with affiliations to hospitals and medical centers. Wal-Mart currently has 33 clinics in the U.S., 26 of which are affiliated with hospitals (Freudenheim [2], New York Times, 5/12).

Source: KaiserNetwork.org

Wal-Mart Begins to Rebuild Health Clinic Business

Wal-Mart’s medical clinics are coming out of rehab.

Early last year, the company spoke of having 400 walk-in clinics by 2010. But later in 2008, that plan went into reverse. Of the 78 clinics Wal-Mart had in operation at the beginning of 2008, all but 17 were closed.

Now it is rebuilding that business, this time largely in partnership with hospitals.

Originally, H. Lee Scott Jr., the Wal-Mart chief executive who retired this year, had assigned a big role for the clinic project to RediClinic, a privately held company backed by Steve Case, the AOL co-founder. But last December RediClinic, citing the poor economy, abruptly shut down its 15 Wal-Mart centers.

Christi Gallagher, a spokeswoman for Wal-Mart, said her company was “disappointed that RediClinic chose to close all of their locations.” She noted that Wal-Mart had reopened two former RediClinics in Arkansas, Wal-Mart’s home state, in a partnership with the Northwest Health System. Wal-Mart now has 33 clinics around the country — 26 of them with a hospital affiliation.

Brad Burns, a spokesman for Mr. Case’s holding company, Revolution Health, said in an e-mail message that RediClinic was not happy with its role at Wal-Mart. “My understanding is RediClinic was looking for commitments from Wal-Mart to justify the capital investments and concluded it would be better to part ways.”

RediClinic itself is now focused on partnering with hospitals for its retail clinics, he said.

Source: The New York Times

Are in-store health clinics worth the savings?

These days, help could be as close as your nearest shopping center. Consumer Reports on Health looks at in-store health clinics a growing phenomenon.

A doctor is on staff at one drugstore clinic 12 hours a day, seven days a week. No appointment needed.

“They love the convenience of being able to come in, to walk in at any time and be treated instead of having to go to the emergency room and having to wait long hours,” said Dr. Maggie Bertisch, Duane Reade Medical Care.

Consumer Reports found that while not all clinics have doctors, you will always be seen by a licensed health professional who has the training to perform tests and prescribe medications.

If you are not covered by insurance, a visit usually runs about $55 to $75. And if you do have insurance, most clinics accept it.

Consumer Reports Associate Health Editor Jamie Kopf Hirsh says there has been a dramatic growth in health clinics located in drugstores, supermarkets and stores like Wal-Mart.

“The key thing is to go to these types of clinics only for minor, one-time kinds of problems, like bladder or ear infections, rashes or pinkeye,” said Kopf Hirsh.

If you have a true emergency, like chest pain or a severe injury, you should be sure to go to a hospital emergency room.

And these facilities are not recommended for children. The American Academy of Pediatrics “opposes retail-based clinics & for infants, children, and adolescents.”

“It’s best to ask your pediatrician about where to go for medical care for your child at night or on the weekends,” said Kopf Hirsh.

But for adults, the occasional visit to a store clinic can be exactly what the doctor ordered.

Consumer Reports says be sure to bring along a list of any medications or supplements you’re taking. And it’s a good idea to ask the clinic to fax a record of your visit to your regular doctor and details on any prescriptions you might have received.

Source: ABC Local News

Solantic Promises Great Care, Fast and Fair

Dedicated to providing superior quality healthcare at a fair price with as little hassle as possible, Solantic walk-in urgent care centers have taken Florida by storm in recent years. Founded in 2001, the Florida-based company has grown to include eight locations in Central Florida, including a clinic in the East Colonial Wal-Mart Supercenter and the newly opened Orlando International Airport location, with more than 20 centers throughout the state.

Fueled by the demand of more of the population seeking non-emergency healthcare in an environment outside of hospital emergency departments or their family physician, the urgent care clinics have risen in popularity providing more locations, doctors and services to their communities. “Urgent care clinics, like Solantic, can treat many of the injuries and illnesses that people have used the ER for in the past and we can do it much faster and far less expensive,” says Solantic co-founder and CEO Karen Bowling. “Many people don’t understand that urgent care centers have X-ray machines, on-site labs and prescriptions and offer treatment for migraines, stomach aches, upper respiratory infections, cuts and a range of other injuries and illnesses.” In addition to offering a wide array of services for patients who are sick or injured, Solantic also has a complete range of physicals and lab tests to help patients assess their health and stay well.

According to Bowling, before forming Solantic one of the key things the company was to focus on was the overall quality of the patient experience. So much so that the founders spent hundreds of hours collecting input from patients across the state about what they felt was missing in their previous healthcare providers. The result? More than 98 percent of their patients say they would return or recommend Solantic. “I am most proud of the patient experience we have been able to create and maintain, and that’s in large part due to hiring doctors and a clinical staff who treat patients the way they would want to be treated,” says Bowling.

Going the extra mile to ensure that patients have a positive overall experience is a goal each location strives to reach on a daily basis. “We want patients to feel good about their experience. We have umbrellas so we can walk patients to their car if its raining; we have blankets for the waiting room if a patient is cold; we have snacks in the waiting room and we are redesigning our Web site so patients can register and forward their forms on to a center and receive a text message when the doctor is ready to see them,” says Bowling. The thing that patients mention the most however is the fact that Solantic doctors call them after their visit to make sure they are feeling better.

The state-of-the-art centers also do their best to ensure that patients feel better about their environment while in their office as well. “The centers are modern and clean, with comfortable furniture and TV’s,” says Bowling. “We have queue monitors that indicate the number of patients and estimated wait time and we offer the convenience of a call-ahead program or patients can leave their cell phone number and we will call them [when they can be seen].” Bowling says that on average each doctor sees between three and five patients an hour.

As Solantic continues to expand to offer its unique brand of walk-in urgent care to Floridians, Bowling stresses that Central Florida plays an important role in their continued success. “Orlando is important to us because of the large, diverse population and the opportunity to save healthcare dollars by having patients use urgent care when they can as opposed to the ER.”

Source: Insight Magazine

Retailers set up in-store clinics

U.S. consumers are increasingly going to clinics inside retail stores for vaccinations and treatment of minor ailments, experts say.

CNNMoney.com reported Monday that retail giants such as Wal-Mart, Walgreens and Rite-Aid have medical clinics within their stores, offering services that are less costly than trips to the traditional doctor’s office.

“In many ways these retail clinics are a response to a broken health care system,” said Jonathan Weiner, professor of health policy and management at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “Not everyone has good access to primary care. We’re also dealing with a shortage of primary care doctors in this country.”

Bruce Carlson of the healthcare market research firm Kalorama Information said the retail clinics are lucrative for retailers. In 2008, there were about 1,200 in-store clinics, with annual revenue of $545 million. By 2013, Carlson said the total is estimated to reach 2,400 clinics, generating about $2 billion in annual revenue.

Candace Corlett with the consulting firm WSL Strategic Retail, said the overall appeal of retail clinics is the convenience they offer patients.

“Suppose I have a sore throat and I don’t have time to go to the doctor, but I still have to buy my groceries,” Corlett said. “I can stop at Walgreens after work, pick up my milk, and have my throat checked at the same time.”

Source: UPI.com

Wal-Mart wants your rash and strep throat

Americans, frustrated by endless waits at the doctor’s office, are sidestepping their family physician and taking their rashes, strep throat and pink eye to stores such as Wal-Mart and Walgreens instead.

As this trend gains more traction, experts say it could define the market for primary care.

“In many ways these retail clinics are a response to a broken health care system,” said Jonathan Weiner, professor of health policy and management at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

“Not everyone has good access to primary care. We’re also dealing with a shortage of primary care doctors in this country,” he said.

Public health experts say retail clinics can, to some extent, fill the gap. But there’s one caveat.

“I suspect these store clinics will be around for a long time, but they won’t take over everything that a doctor can do,” said Dr. Sherry Glied, chairwoman of the Mailman School Department of Health Policy and Management at Columbia University’s School of Public Health.

Wal-Mart, Walgreens, CVS and Rite-Aid are among an expanding number of retailers that operate in-store health clinics.

It’s not merely a public service. Bruce Carlson, publisher with health care market research firm Kalorama Information says retail clinics are a lucrative niche market for merchants.

The firm said these clinics numbered just over 1,200 in 2008 with annual revenue of $545 million. By 2013, Carlson said the total is estimated to reach 2,400 with revenue of about $2 billion.

These “retail clinics” are typically staffed by nurse practitioners. They administer vaccinations and treat customers – both uninsured and insured – for minor ailments. They also test for conditions such as hypertension and diabetes.

Although in-store clinics have only been around for a few years, it’s only recently that their appeal has grown with consumers, according to the latest industry survey from consulting firm WSL Strategic Retail.

The survey, which polled 1,500 consumers, showed awareness about retail clinics has jumped to 56% in 2009, up from 38% in 2007.

The survey also showed that usage of store clinics has increased the most among younger consumers, who are less likely to have ties to a family physician or to have insurance.

Another group – consumers making $100,000 or more per year – are warming up to retail clinics faster than low-income or uninsured consumers who may not be able to afford the average $60 fee.

Candace Corlett, principal and retail analyst with consulting firm WSL Strategic Retail, said the overall appeal of retail clinics is the convenience they offer.

“Suppose I have a sore throat and I don’t have time to go to the doctor, but I still have to buy my groceries,” said Corlett. “I can stop at Walgreens after work, pick up my milk, and have my throat checked at the same time.”

Health care as a commodity

Corlett believes the survey findings indicate consumers are treating health care as a commodity.

“Just like you pick your favorite store to get your beauty advice and products, people are picking their favorite store to get their earache treated,” she said.

“There’s a cultural shift that’s going on with how we approach health care, and I think the retail market is ready for health care becoming a commodity,” Corlett said.

No. 1 drug store chain CVS already operates more than 500 MinuteClinics at its stores nationwide. Rival Walgreens plans to expand its health and wellness clinics to more than 800 in-store locations by the end of the year.

Recently, Walgreens announced it would offer free care until the end of the year to people who are unemployed and uninsured.

“This is Walgreens being opportunistic. What a great way to get people to develop a new habit of using retail clinics,” said Corlett.

Wal-Mart, the largest retailer, opened its first “limited scope” walk-in clinic in 2005 and currently operates more than 70 clinics in its stores.

Even supermarkets such as Safeway and Kroger are staffing nurse practitioners in a few stores.

Will store clinics replace doctors?

In addition to offering a no longer than 15 to 20 minute wait and comparatively low cost versus a doctor’s office, Johns Hopkins’ Weiner said price transparency is another big selling point of store clinics.

Weiner said price transparency has become increasingly important as employers try to control their health care costs by offering workers tax-free savings vehicles such as health savings accounts (HSA) or health reimbursement arrangements (HRA).

These options typically lower premiums but raise deductibles before the insurance coverage sets in. The clinics allow consumers to keep better track of their account balances.

“Store clinics clearly advertise their prices, but most doctors don’t,” Weiner said. “This could be a competitive threat for doctors.”

Still, both Weiner and Glied said store clinics are unlikely to fully replace doctors anytime soon.

“Right now people are using them for four things. Colds, sore throats, earaches and flu shots,” Weiner said. “When it’s something more serious than this, most people want to go to a doctor.”

“No one really believes that retail clinics should be the model for health care,” he said.

However, if store clinics eventually collaborate with other sources such as HMOs and hospitals, and expand services to deal with more urgent care, it could shake up the primary care market, Weiner said.

“The way they exist today, they are ideal for busy moms and adults with colds,” said Weiner.

Source: CNNMoney.com

Clinic at WalMart Getting Solid Response

People are starting to get more than just their groceries and household supplies checked out at WalMart. They’re also using the Campbell superstore in Springfield for their health care needs. This clinic has been open for about a month now and CoxHealth officials say it’s already served more than six hundred people. Some patients say this clinic truly is, a life saver.

Pat Johnson is self-employed.  She’s always relied on her husband’s health insurance to cover her medical expenses. That is until her husband lost his job last year. “That’s why it’s been so long because I haven’t been since last summer,” said Johnson.

Johnson says she has high cholesterol, but has held off on getting it checked because of the cost. And she’s not the only one at the WalMart clinic waiting to get checked in.

“I think I have strep throat but I’m not sure,” said Nick Taylor. OTC student Nick Taylor says he also doesn’t have insurance right now, and was looking for a less expensive option. “My parents just recently changed jobs so I’m waiting to get back on their insurance in a month,” said Taylor.

CoxHealth officials say more than fifty percent of the people who come to this clinic may not have health insurance.  That means their options are either to pay about fifty dollars a day for health care here, or go to the hospital and pay hundreds.

CoxHealth Vice President of Regional Services David Taylor says he thinks this clinic highlights the need in Springfield, and across the country, for low cost health care. “I think the timing is right for it.  There’s certainly a demand for the service in terms of access and convenience, and affordability is certainly a factor in our economy today,” said Taylor.

Johnson says if it wasn’t for this clinic, she probably wouldn’t get her cholesterol checked. She’s glad she now be able to keep up on her health care needs, and her monthly bills. “It’s 25 dollars and you can’t beat it, to check your health,” said Johnson.

CoxHealth officials say the WalMart Clinic has done so well. That they plan to open another one in Republic in a few weeks. You don’t need an appointment but as you could see from our video the clinic does sometimes get pretty busy, so there might be a little bit of a wait.

Source: OzarksFirst.com

Opinions differ on department stores offering health clinics

You already can go to Wal-Mart for your groceries, your photos, your oil change and your eye exam.

What if you could get your sore throat examined or your child’s earache diagnosed, too?

That’s the concept behind a new health-care trend that has spread across the country in recent years at retailers like Wal-Mart, Target and CVS, and it has local health-care experts sitting up and taking note.

At a recent community forum, Washington County Health System Vice President Michael Zampelli warned that while retail health clinics might be convenient, they have drawbacks, too.

That’s why Washington County Health System is trying to head off the trend by adapting its existing walk-in urgent-care facilities to mimic the ultraconvenient retail clinic model, Zampelli said.

“We’re not a Wal-Mart and we’re not a Target, but we are a comprehensive health system, so we actually have a leg up, and we can do this better than someone else could,” he said.

The trend has not reached Washington County yet, but two of the leading brands, CVS’ Minute Clinic and Target’s Target Clinic, are already thriving in Maryland communities as close as Howard and Montgomery counties.

The clinics are typically open for extended hours, seven days a week, and staffed by nurse practitioners, who see patients on a first-come, first-served basis for common ailments such as bladder infections, pink eye and strep throat. The nurse practitioners can write prescriptions that can then be filled at a pharmacy in the same store.

The drawback, Zampelli said, is that the clinics are not integrated into the rest of the health system, so the results don’t automatically end up at a patient’s doctor’s office, or in his or her prescription records, and the clinic might not get the patient’s full medical history.

Brent Burkhardt, a spokesman for Minute Clinic, said the clinic does take an extensive medical history from every patient on the first visit, and offers at the end of each visit to send the record to the patient’s doctor’s office. In addition, Minute Clinic keeps an electronic patient history that can be accessed from any Minute Clinic location nationwide, he said.

“I don’t think many other health-care providers could do that,” Burkhardt said.

Studies have shown that the retail flavor, with prices posted upfront (Flu, $94; Mono, $69) is comforting to people who conduct most of their daily transactions in a retail environment, Zampelli said.

In contrast, many people associate traditional health care with appointments, long waits and an illness-related atmosphere, he said.

A survey of users of Washington County’s urgent-care clinics revealed many of them choose urgent care for the same reasons that consumers are attracted to retail clinics elsewhere, Zampelli said.

Urgent care was set up several years ago to take pressure off Washington County Hospital’s emergency room, but the survey revealed many people are using it instead of a primary-care physician because they prefer walk-in care to scheduling appointments.

To better accommodate that trend, the health system recently doubled its staffing, adding more nurse practitioners, Zampelli said.

The goal is to meet the region’s demand for convenient walk-in care before the retail clinic trend arrives, Zampelli said.

However, spokespeople for Minute Clinic, Target and Wal-Mart all said their brands have no immediate plans to expand into the Washington County area.

Minute Clinic is currently focusing its clinics in major metropolitan markets, Burkhardt said. It has about 500 locations in 25 states across the country.

Target has clinics in Minnesota and Maryland, and Wal-Mart has about a half-dozen independent clinics at stores in eight states.

Minute Clinic projects it will have 2,500 locations nationwide over the next several years, while Wal-Mart is projecting 2,000 clinics by 2014, Zampelli said.

Zampelli noted that as the retail market shrinks, health care is a natural evolution for retail chains, because the health care market is growing.

“So it could be that someday, we may be going to Wal-Mart for our MRIs, our CTs and our cataract surgeries, our nurse practitioners,” he said. “I don’t know about you, but to me, that’s a scary thought.”

Source: The Herald-Mail

RediClinic adding new services

RediClinic LLC is expanding its offerings at its clinics in 15 H-E-B stores in Houston and six in Austin.

The Houston-based company says it plans to add steroid injections for allergy relief, Rocephin antibiotic treatment for common bacterial infections, B-12 shots for an energy boost, mononucleosis testing and acne treatment to its services at the clinics, which are staffed by certified nurse practitioners and physician assistants.

Retail clinic expansion has hit hard times in some parts of the country. In December RediClinic announced it would close all 15 of its clinics inside Wal-Mart stores.

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