Urgent Care Could Be the Answer to Shortfalls in the New Paxlovid Delivery Program

Urgent Care Could Be the Answer to Shortfalls in the New Paxlovid Delivery Program

At first glance, Walgreens’ plan to partner with Uber and DoorDash to provide free delivery of Paxlovid (nirmatrelvir tablets; ritonavir tablets) for COVID-19 patients in underserved communities looks like a great plan that could be invaluable in warding off a winter surge. Look a bit deeper, though, and it’s unclear exactly how effective the plan will be. Most problematically, it presumes that those underserved communities have a Walgreens nearby and that the ride share and …

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The Numbers Are Mounting, and Show That Provider-Shortage Worries Are Well-Founded

The Numbers Are Mounting, and Show That Provider-Shortage Worries Are Well-Founded

As countless adages would attest, most of the scenarios we worry about never come to fruition. Unfortunately, new data on the healthcare workforce indicate that concerns about provider shortages are an exception. According to a Definitive Healthcare report entitled Addressing the Healthcare Staffing Shortage, the United States healthcare system lost 333,942 providers in 2021—with the majority (117,000) being physicians. The grand total also included 75,999 advanced-practice practitioners (53,295 nurse practitioners and 22,704 physician assistants). Internal …

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With More Patients Leaving the ED Without Being Seen, Urgent Care Has to Keep on Its Game

With More Patients Leaving the ED Without Being Seen, Urgent Care Has to Keep on Its Game

Last year saw more patients leave emergency rooms without being seen than ever before, according to research published by JAMA Network Open. Per data collected between 2017 and 2021 from between 365 and 1,769 hospital EDs (it varied by year), the rate of patients who left the ED without being seen jumped from 1.1% to 2.1% in the United States. While their destination upon leaving the ED was not part of the study, it’s reasonable …

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Hospitals Nationwide Are Cutting Services—Including in the ED. Where Will Patients Turn?

Hospitals Nationwide Are Cutting Services—Including in the ED. Where Will Patients Turn?

Urgent care has thrived by proving to be a safe, cost-effective alternative to hospital emergency rooms for nonemergent complaints. In some areas of the U.S., urgent care centers may become more than an “alternative” to care soon, though. Becker’s Hospital Review reports that 17 hospitals from New Jersey to California are cutting back on services that would surely be described as “essential” to many patients. While obstetrics and maternity seem to be the most likely …

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Are Staffing Challenges Preventing Urgent Care from Seizing a Moment in Its Evolution?

Are Staffing Challenges Preventing Urgent Care from Seizing a Moment in Its Evolution?

Regular readers of JUCM and JUCM News know the United States is scrambling to a solution for a future that will, unless trends change quickly, see fewer primary care physicians than ever relative to the patient population. What has gone under the radar for the most part until now is the equally daunting challenge of running a practice with fewer nurses, medical assistants, and various technicians. In short, at a time when urgent care has …

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Ready or Not, the Impending Physician Shortage May Make Greater Use of APPs Inevitable

Ready or Not, the Impending Physician Shortage May Make Greater Use of APPs Inevitable

In recognition of the likelihood that primary care physicians will be in increasingly short supply over years to come, a primary care chain in Minnesota has taken the extraordinary step of staffing its six locations exclusively with nurse practitioners. As reported in Becker’s Hospital Review, The Good Clinic may even be taking a page from the urgent care playbook by promising to see patients sooner than a traditional primary care practice can these days—though their …

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APPs Are Moving to Capitalize on Gains Made During the Pandemic as Their Numbers Grow

APPs Are Moving to Capitalize on Gains Made During the Pandemic as Their Numbers Grow

In the all-hands-on-deck peak of the COVID-19 pandemic, many states cleared the way for physician assistants to take on more authority—temporarily, in order to get through the crisis. Now that things have smoothed out a bit (at least for now), PAs are pushing for at least some of those relaxed limitations to become permanent, according to an article published by Becker’s Hospital Review. The article goes on to point out that some physician groups, including …

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Decreasing Margins May Move Hospitals to Partner More Frequently with Urgent Care

Decreasing Margins May Move Hospitals to Partner More Frequently with Urgent Care

Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, patients who may have previously gone to the closest hospital emergency room for nonemergent complaints simply went without care or managed to get care through other means. According to an article just published by Fierce Healthcare, margins at those hospitals have suffered accordingly, with the real threat that they’ll continue to do so thanks to patients’ new reliance on urgent care, telehealth, and other options. As a result, …

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UCA Is Putting Urgent Care Out There to Support CDC’s Antibiotic Stewardship Efforts

UCA Is Putting Urgent Care Out There to Support CDC’s Antibiotic Stewardship Efforts

The Urgent Care Association’s Urgent Care Foundation is using its first-ever grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to develop programs that further the cause of antibiotic stewardship. The funds will be put toward updating the UCA/College of Urgent Care Medicine Antibiotic Stewardship toolkit, creating a 4-year industry action plan, and continuing the partnership with the Antibiotic Resistance Action Center at George Washington University. This work is especially timely in the wake of a …

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AMA Is Concerned About the Physician Shortage—and Says Urgent Care Is Part of the Solution

AMA Is Concerned About the Physician Shortage—and Says Urgent Care Is Part of the Solution

A recent post to the American Medical Association’s website acknowledges that the looming physician shortage could be very problematic for patients who already have a hard time managing diabetes, hypertension, and other chronic health concerns with the help of their primary care team. The solution, the piece suggests, is greater use of “team-based care” that would include PCPs, specialists, and nonphysician clinicians (eg, nurses and pharmacists), as well as nonclinicians. The choice of settings in …

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