Arrival of the COVID-19 Vaccine Could Influence the State of Urgent Care and Retail Clinics for Years to Come

Arrival of the COVID-19 Vaccine Could Influence the State of Urgent Care and Retail Clinics for Years to Come

When tests for COVID-19 first became available, there was no place at the table for urgent care. Supplies were allocated elsewhere, while simultaneously patients were afraid of visiting urgent care center locations, lest they raise their risk of getting sick (a largely unfounded fear). The drop in patient visits and revenue has been well documented. Now as talk of the arrival of one or more vaccines against the virus heats up, there’s concern in some …

Read More
‘MIS’—It’s Not Just for Kids Anymore

‘MIS’—It’s Not Just for Kids Anymore

Having been lulled into a fall sense of safety when it came to children and COVID-19, it came as a shock to the general public when word started to spread about multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C). It’s probably less shocking, but perhaps just as frightening, then, to learn that MIS appears to strike adults with the virus. The concern about this revelation—besides caring for the individual patient who’s affected—is that this has occurred under …

Read More
Adopting Telemedicine? Be Mindful of the Potential for Fraud—and Consequent Penalties

Adopting Telemedicine? Be Mindful of the Potential for Fraud—and Consequent Penalties

As happens often with advances in the way medicine is practiced—and billed for—telemedicine has now reached a level of acceptance sufficient for widespread fraud to become an issue. The U.S. Department of Justice has levied charges of fraud totaling more than $6 billion against 345 people in 51 federal districts, with $4.5 billion of that sum connected to telemedicine billing. It’s the DOJ’s biggest fraud roundup ever. Those charged in the telemedicine sweep 86 defendants, …

Read More
Zoom+Care Thinks Telehealth Will Boost Their Reach Dramatically

Zoom+Care Thinks Telehealth Will Boost Their Reach Dramatically

Zoom+Care has carved out an identity for itself as a tech-savvy provider of urgent care services on a regional level in the Pacific Northwest. According to a report posted on Geekwire.com, however, the company says it’s going to devote more energy into offering virtual medicine services—to the extent that they think they reach nearly 8 million more patients in Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington. There are also plans to open additional brick-and-mortar facilities in both …

Read More
Free Webinar: COVID-19 Vaccines Are on the Way. Are You Prepared for What Comes Next?

Free Webinar: COVID-19 Vaccines Are on the Way. Are You Prepared for What Comes Next?

Opinions on exactly when it will happen vary considerably, but all informed parties agree that at least one safe, effective vaccine against COVID-19 will be available in the coming months. The question is…what then? The College of Urgent Care Medicine is working with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to make sure urgent care operators have a chance to be up to date on plans to facilitate widespread vaccination, as will be detailed in …

Read More
Make Patients Understand—Recovering from COVID-19 Does Not Confer Long-Term Immunity

Make Patients Understand—Recovering from COVID-19 Does Not Confer Long-Term Immunity

Since the COVID-19 pandemic really took hold in the U.S., there’s been a presumption that patients who were infected with and then recovered from the virus had protection against reinfection. We now know that’s not correct, however; patients can get COVID-19 more than once. So far, evidence indicates reinfection is rare—but there have been confirmed cases, the first one in the U.S. being a symptomatic 25-year-old, otherwise healthy, man who first tested positive on April …

Read More
Surprise COVID-19 Bills Are Starting to Hit Patients. Can Urgent Care Be a Solution?

Surprise COVID-19 Bills Are Starting to Hit Patients. Can Urgent Care Be a Solution?

U.S. media reports in the early weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic drove many worried citizens to seek care (or even just testing) wherever they could, without regard to whether it was the best setting for their situation. Months later, as billing is catching up, it’s time to pay the piper—and some of the bills are far higher than patients may have expected. As we’ve seen historically, a good number are associated with freestanding emergency rooms. …

Read More
Another Study Moves the Timeline on How Long A COVID-19 Patient Is Infectious

Another Study Moves the Timeline on How Long A COVID-19 Patient Is Infectious

Since March, there have been many conflicting reports, as well as actual studies, on how COVID-19 is transmitted, who is at greatest risk, and how the virus is transmitted. The length of time a patient is considered infectious has been the subject of ever-changing intel, as well. At one point, 6 days was thought to be the window; then it was 10, and then 14 days. Now the Journal of Infection has published a paper …

Read More
Urgent Care Operators Adapt to the Pandemic by Broadening Their Ability to Care for Patients

Urgent Care Operators Adapt to the Pandemic by Broadening Their Ability to Care for Patients

Many segments of our society have been forced to reduce services due to the COVID-19 pandemic. After some initial, severe setbacks at the outset, however, urgent care has had the fortitude to consider where there could be opportunities to adapt for the mutual benefit of patients and the industry. Some locations became testing centers. Others broadened their virtual health offerings. Looking at the fast-approaching flu season and the ongoing pandemic, Cox South Hospital in Springfield, …

Read More
In Spite of Pandemic-Related Challenges, Urgent Care Patient Volume Continues to Grow—and Centers Are Ready to Pitch in on Vaccinations

In Spite of Pandemic-Related Challenges, Urgent Care Patient Volume Continues to Grow—and Centers Are Ready to Pitch in on Vaccinations

For months, the Urgent Care Association has been asking its constituency to take part in surveys designed to take the industry’s temperature on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Responses to the most recent queries show that UCA member organizations are still seeing patient volumes grow—albeit slowly this month (1%)—as they recover from setbacks early in the pandemic. Perhaps more importantly, the majority are looking ahead and planning to participate in immunization programs once a …

Read More