At Least Some Lawmakers See Urgent Care as a Resource for Improving Mental Health Care

At Least Some Lawmakers See Urgent Care as a Resource for Improving Mental Health Care

Just a few weeks ago, we shared the news that Arizona, New Jersey, and South Dakota have all seen addition of walk-in mental health centers in various communities. Now New Jersey state legislators are aiming to put state resources into ensuring such opportunities become more readily available—with existing urgent care centers a key part of the plan. As reported by NJ.com, one of six bills being proposed takes aim at the high number of patients …

Read More
What Happens When Patients Don’t Need the ED but Can’t Get to Urgent Care? Here’s One Answer

What Happens When Patients Don’t Need the ED but Can’t Get to Urgent Care? Here’s One Answer

An elderly lady who longer drives and has a scorching sore throat might be inclined to call an ambulance to take her to the emergency room. Clearly, it’s not an emergency but she’s got to see someone. In most places across the U.S. the end result will be a trip to the ED, which will have her waiting—for hours, maybe—and result in higher-than-necessary charges to Medicare. Under a new initiative in Seattle, however, it would …

Read More
‘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 …

Read More
With Masks Coming Off, Urgent Care Operators Are Inching Back to ‘Normal’ Practices

With Masks Coming Off, Urgent Care Operators Are Inching Back to ‘Normal’ Practices

With the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently adapting its stance on wearing masks in public to reduce risk for spreading COVID-19, urgent care operators are already using the new guidance to review their own practices and procedures. They’re also being encouraged to do so by fluctuations in patient volume. Tomah Health in Wisconsin, for example, is reopening its urgent care facility after closing it in January due to overwhelming COVID-19 cases in its …

Read More
Pandemic Woes Haven’t Dampened the Outlook for Urgent Care Growth

Pandemic Woes Haven’t Dampened the Outlook for Urgent Care Growth

Urgent care as an industry was on a steady growth path before February 2019. It wouldn’t be surprising to learn that subsequent low patient volumes and getting shut out of early distribution of COVID-19 testing supplies and vaccinations, respectively, put a damper on expectations for further progress—but that’s not the case. In fact, urgent care operators’ collective resilience and creativity in adapting to changing conditions (such as setting up testing or vaccination events in parking …

Read More
Urgent Care Had to Fight for Its Seat at the Table, but Is Now an Essential Player in Fighting the Pandemic

Urgent Care Had to Fight for Its Seat at the Table, but Is Now an Essential Player in Fighting the Pandemic

The urgent care industry has done a great job of making the case that it has the expertise and accessibility to be essential to the fight against COVID-19—a far cry from the early days when resources were channeled elsewhere. This was confirmed when the Centers for Disease Control and prevention made a point of including urgent care centers on the same level as emergency rooms in a study of the effectiveness of boosters for both the …

Read More
The Pandemic Rebound Is Real—Though the Extent Varies by Payer

The Pandemic Rebound Is Real—Though the Extent Varies by Payer

We don’t need to tell you how badly patient volumes suffered for a good stretch of the pandemic. Patients stayed away not just from urgent care centers, but all ambulatory care settings. The advent of vaccines and wider availability of testing supplies started to right the ship, but concerns have remained that “normal” visits—those for complaints unrelated to COVID-19—might take a while to return to pre-pandemic levels. An article just published by the Journal of …

Read More
Health Officials Are Looking to Urgent Care to Bail Out Saturated EDs. Can You?

Health Officials Are Looking to Urgent Care to Bail Out Saturated EDs. Can You?

Urgent care as an industry is in a precarious position as the COVID-19 pandemic surge rages on. Driven by the most transmissible variant to date, multiple states and major cities are grappling with their largest caseloads yet. Overcrowding in emergency rooms is so bad that hospital administrators and public health officials from Philadelphia to Iowa are recommending that patients stay away from the ED if at all possible and opt to visit their closest urgent …

Read More
Urgent Care Will Have to Get Creative to Solve Staffing and Pandemic Crises. Are You Up to It?

Urgent Care Will Have to Get Creative to Solve Staffing and Pandemic Crises. Are You Up to It?

With the last days of 2021 winding down, some parts of the country are as deeply embedded in the COVID-19 pandemic as they’ve ever been. In New York City, urgent care centers are seeing up to five times their normal volume while at the same time grappling with staffing shortages (which are at least partially due to the virus to begin with). Patients need care for all the “normal” urgent care complaints while locations are …

Read More
Pandemic Challenges Can Be Met—and Overcome. Here’s the Evidence

Pandemic Challenges Can Be Met—and Overcome. Here’s the Evidence

We’re all aware that it can be difficult for some regions of the United States to attract enough top-tier providers to meet the needs of smaller communities. JUCM has been covering this issue for years, in fact (see Rural and Tertiary Markets: The Next Urgent Care Frontier). And that’s during “normal” times. Lack of access, sometimes poor healthcare literacy, and the politicization of COVID-19 has put an inordinate amount of additional stress on rural health …

Read More