If Documentation Is Costing You Time with Patients (and Money), You’re Not Alone

If Documentation Is Costing You Time with Patients (and Money), You’re Not Alone

This will fall short of being a news flash, but physicians believe they spend too much time on documenting the care they provide during their time with patients. What is new (and possibly maddening), however, are data on time spent documenting outside of office hours and just how many physicians are dissatisfied with their EHR system. According to a new article in The Journal of the American Association, 35% of primary care physicians spend at …

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Employing RNs vs NPs May Not Offer Payroll Savings Much Longer—in Some Areas

Employing RNs vs NPs May Not Offer Payroll Savings Much Longer—in Some Areas

Historically, there’s been a pretty sizeable pay gap between nurse practitioners and registered nurses. Given the role NPs play in urgent care, it’s an important consideration in evaluating the makeup and scheduling of the clinical team. There are signs that the gap could be shrinking in some states, however. According to the California Health Foundation, for example, median salary for an RN in the Golden State is $110,620 compared with $129,960 for NPs, a difference …

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The ‘Great Resignation’ Isn’t Helping an Already-Bleak Staffing Situation—but There Might Be a Solution

The ‘Great Resignation’ Isn’t Helping an Already-Bleak Staffing Situation—but There Might Be a Solution

JUCM and other medical industry publications have been aware of growing concerns over provider shortages for several years now. While the pandemic has done nothing to improve the prospect of maintaining a steady flow of new clinicians in the coming years, it has increased the risk of urgent care centers losing nonclinical staff leaving their current positions. Presumably some have left healthcare-related jobs, possibly wearied by the stress of being on the frontlines of a …

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Update: Clarity on ‘Test to Treat’ for COVID-19 Continues to Be a Moving Target

Update: Clarity on ‘Test to Treat’ for COVID-19 Continues to Be a Moving Target

When details of the “test to treat” initiative first emerged, it appeared that urgent care would once again be left out in the cold, unable to test patients for COVID-19 and then provide an immediate prescription and treatment on site; as originally detailed, it appeared that right was going to be conferred mainly to pharmacies. Then, as JUCM News readers know, the Health and Human Services Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response …

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Whether You’re in Trouble or Not, When the FBI Shows Up You’d Better Have a Plan

Whether You’re in Trouble or Not, When the FBI Shows Up You’d Better Have a Plan

Residents of a sleepy Pittsburgh suburb were likely shocked last week to find the parking lot of a local business taken over by FBI vehicles—even more so when they discovered that the building, occupied by an urgent care center that had by all accounts been an indispensable community asset throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, was essentially taken over by agents. The doors were locked to keep patients out, and opened only long enough for agents to …

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Two Years into the Pandemic—and After Months of Progress—Patients Are Still Leery of Visits

Two Years into the Pandemic—and After Months of Progress—Patients Are Still Leery of Visits

Urgent care operators know all too well that visits dropped precipitously at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic as patients stayed home rather than risk exposure in the waiting room or from clinicians. By June of 2020, an article in Managed Healthcare Executive reminds us, around 41% of adults begged off visiting a healthcare provider. Whether valid or not, patient concern before the advent of vaccination and testing for COVID-19 was understandable. The greater concern, …

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‘Test to Treat’ COVID-19 Plans May Bear Some Clarification When It Comes to Urgent Care

‘Test to Treat’ COVID-19 Plans May Bear Some Clarification When It Comes to Urgent Care

If you watched President Biden’s State of the Union speech, you probably took note of changes planned for the “test to treat” initiative, in which patients can visit specified clinics to receive a COVID-19 test and then immediate treatment if warranted. Though the president called out pharmacy-based clinics as a specific example of such locations, the Health and Human Services Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (ASPR) has since clarified that urgent …

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Is Urgent Care Immune to—or at Risk in—the Ongoing Evolution of the American Workplace?

Is Urgent Care Immune to—or at Risk in—the Ongoing Evolution of the American Workplace?

Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the American workplace has been undergone a rapid evolution. At first it was incumbent upon employers to find a way to maximize productivity when many employees were confined to their homes. Needless to say, that was a more viable option for some than others. Urgent care has been in an unusual position in that some team members can work virtually (administrators, telemedicine providers) while others really have to …

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Go About It the Wrong Way and COVID Testing Could Cost You in a Number of Ways

Go About It the Wrong Way and COVID Testing Could Cost You in a Number of Ways

Offering COVID-19 testing services could engender good will and bring new patients to your practice—or it could lead to disappointment, lost opportunity, or even legal scrutiny. In New York, the attorney general has warned various entities who advertise a specific turnaround time on COVID-19 tests that they’d better make good on their promises or face stiff consequences. In the Midwest, federal health officials as well as investigators from several states are investigating the practices of …

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The Pandemic Really Is Contributing to Mental Health Issues. What Can Urgent Care Do About It?

The Pandemic Really Is Contributing to Mental Health Issues. What Can Urgent Care Do About It?

The idea that having to deal with COVID-driven social restrictions, concerns about illness, and mask mandates could cause problems with the public’s mental health is no longer theoretical. An article just published by JAMA Network Open reveals that some individuals started to have struggles as early as spring of 2020, the earliest time period covered by the Johns Hopkins COVID-19 Civic Life and Public Health Survey. Researchers assessed psychological distress in four waves: April 7–13, …

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