News & Updates

In cooperation with the American Ambulance Association, we and others have created a running compilation of local and national news stories relating to EMS delivery. Since January, 2021, over 1,900 news reports have been chronicled, with 49% highlighting the EMS staffing crisis, and 34% highlighting the funding crisis. Combined reports of staffing and/or funding account for 83% of the media reports! 96 reports cite EMS system closures/agencies departing communities, and 95% of the news articles reference staffing challenges, funding issues and response times.


Click below for an up to date list of these news stories, with links to the source documents.

Read Only - Media Log as of 4-8-24.xlsx

  • 8 Feb 2018 12:30 PM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    NEW YORK — Roughly $1 trillion per year is spent on hospital care, which is about a third of all health care costs in the U.S. But a new program cuts costs by allowing patients to be treated at home.

    Dr. David Levine and nurse Kim Tierney of Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital are making a house call, treating Phyllis Petruzzelli for pneumonia in her living room.

    Petruzzelli enrolled in an innovative program. Instead of staying in the hospital, patients are sent to their homes for treatment following a visit to the emergency room. There’s one goal: control costs without sacrificing quality. At first, Petruzzelli was skeptical.

    “You’re old-school, you’re sick, you go to the hospital, you stay there,” she said. “You don’t have the doctor come to the house anymore.”

    There are daily visits and 24-hour access to her medical team. Vital signs are remotely monitored by a skin patch.

    A study out Wednesday found home stays had the same levels of safety and quality of care as those in the hospital at about half the cost. Doctors ordered far fewer blood tests and scans.

    “By moving people to their home we automatically are able to customize what they need and tailor it to them and that’s part of the place where we see a lot of cost savings,” said Dr. Levine.

    Home patients also walk 10 times more than those in the hospital.

    “We believe that because patients are moving more at home that they’re going to be able to preserve their strength and end up better off afterward,” said Dr. Levine.

    It looks like those home patients do better after discharge. New data shows fewer readmissions to the hospital at 30 days. There may be other benefits beyond the cost savings — better sleep, and a lower chance of catching something from a hospital patient just a curtain away

  • 7 Feb 2018 7:00 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Free-standing emergency rooms began to pop up in Texas eight years ago, but now economists say the business model grew too fast and may not always be the lower-cost option for patients.

    These standalone facilities are licensed by the state to provide 24-hour emergency services to patients and exploded in The Lone Star State after the passage of a law in 2009 that allowed the establishment of ERs independent of hospitals.

    Texas had only a handful of free-standing ERs in 2000. Now there are more than 200 across the state.

    And they have been a windfall for the state, which has earned $3.1 million in revenue just by issuing two-year licenses, according to the Dallas Morning News. But the cost of care, while still lower than a traditional hospital emergency room, has also increased, the publication reports. The mean cost of a visit at a free-standing ER was $2,199 in 2015, the article notes, compared to $2,259 at a hospital ER.

    Research also finds that the facilities tend to open in more affluent, populated areas, and not where they may help the most, in rural communities.

    Another problem: State licensing laws vary. For example, a rural community in Missouri wanted to explore the model, but then learned the state currently doesn’t allow free-standing facilities, St Louis Public Radio reports. Further complicating the issue, it’s against federal law for independent free-standing emergency centers, not affiliated with a hospital, to accept Medicaid or Medicare. That means patients must pay out of pocket or find another facility affiliated with a hospital.

    This became an issue in Aransas County, Texas, last year when the only hospital in the area had to shut down due to damage from Hurricane Harvey, KRISTV reports. Code 3 Emergency Room in Rockport was inundated with patients for a month after the storm. And in some cases, physicians weren’t paid for the care they provided. If a patient’s life is at risk, even if the patient is on Medicare or Medicaid, Texas law requires Code 3 ER physicians to provide care, according to the media outlet.

    “We take care of them, we stabilize them, we call a helicopter. They get paid for it, but we don’t, for doing all the care up to it including calling the helicopter,” Justin Hensley, M.D., medical director of Code 3 Emergency Room, told the publication, adding that physicians are working with members of Congress to try to get disaster funds to treat patients with Medicaid and Medicare.

    Hospital systems in other parts of the country, however, are committed to opening new free-standing facilities. For example, Florida Hospital plans to open two standalone ERs, each with 24 beds, in Orlando and Oviedo this year, Orlando Business Journal reports. And in Arizona, a new $8.5 million facility will open next week to provide care to Marana-area residents, the second such facility to pen in the Tuscon area, according to Tucson.com. Both facilities are owned and operated by Northwest Healthcare, which is part of Community Health Systems, so don’t have the same concerns as independent standalone ERs.

    “They are controversial in some of the other communities because those free-standing EDs are independent. They are not affiliated with a healthcare system, they don’t have contracts with insurance companies and so patients go there and the get gouged for these big bills,” Kevin Stockton, regional president and market CEO of Northwest Healthcare, told Tuscon. com.“We’re still in network. Patients coming to our ED, whether they are in a hospital or a free-standing one, it’s the same financial implications.”

    Original article can be accessed here.

  • 30 Jan 2018 7:30 PM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway and JPMorgan Chase & Co. are launching a new company aimed at cutting healthcare costs for their U.S. employees.

    Here are six things to know about the partnership.

    1. In addition to reducing healthcare costs, the companies are aiming to improve employee satisfaction through the new venture. Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway and JPMorgan are hoping the sheer size of each company and their complementary areas of expertise will help them tackle these issues.

    2. “Our people want transparency, knowledge and control when it comes to managing their healthcare,” said Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JPMorgan. “The three of our companies have extraordinary resources, and our goal is to create solutions that benefit our U.S. employees, their families and, potentially, all Americans.”

    3. The companies said the project, which is in the early planning stage, will initially focus on technology solutions.

    4. “The healthcare system is complex, and we enter into this challenge open-eyed about the degree of difficulty,” said Jeff Bezos, Amazon founder and CEO. “Hard as it might be, reducing healthcare’s burden on the economy while improving outcomes for employees and their families would be worth the effort. Success is going to require talented experts, a beginner’s mind, and a long-term orientation.”

    5. The new venture will be jointly spearheaded by Todd Combs, an investment officer of Berkshire Hathaway; Marvelle Sullivan Berchtold, a managing director of JPMorgan Chase; and Beth Galetti, a senior vice president at Amazon.

    6. “The ballooning costs of healthcare act as a hungry tapeworm on the American economy,” said Berkshire Hathaway Chairman and CEO Warren Buffett. “Our group does not come to this problem with answers. But we also do not accept it as inevitable. Rather, we share the belief that putting our collective resources behind the country’s best talent can, in time, check the rise in health costs while concurrently enhancing patient satisfaction and outcomes.”

    Original article accessed here.

  • 30 Jan 2018 7:00 PM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    LONDON — The Taliban has claimed responsibility for an attack in Kabul Saturday. More than 100 people were killed and twice as many were injured when an attacker drove an ambulance packed with explosives into the heart of the city.

    It’s not hard to buy a used ambulance. CBS News posed as buyers and found one on eBay. But according to security experts like Chris Phillips, the resale of emergency vehicles is handing terrorists a lethal weapon.

    “The terrorist threat is wider, it’s more diverse,” said Phillips. “One of those attacks will almost certainly be a vehicle bomb.”

    It’s a threat that British security services flagged a decade ago when they were being used in Iraq. They’re called Trojan vehicles, seemingly ordinary ambulances that are instead packed with explosives.

    “You’re not going to know that the ambulance coming towards you is a real one or a fake one,” Phillips said.

    He also said the fear is that tactic will be imported here as terror attacks by Islamic militants grow.

    “There needs to be some kind of legislation to stop the use of these vehicles or we’re going to have a major problem with this.”

    We found plenty of examples on eBay. A police car with original equipment in the truck, an ambulance with full emergency markings — most run for just a few thousand dollars.

    “Anyone can turn up, they can pay cash for the vehicles and within hours those vehicles can be in the hands of a terrorist cell,” said Lord Carlile of Berriew, who led calls to outlaw the resale of emergency vehicles.

    But there are still no clear regulations governing the resale of ambulances. Lord Carlile pointed out last year’s Ariana Grande concert where 60 ambulances raced to the scene, is exactly the scenario where a Trojan vehicle could exploit the chaos.

    “That is the sort of place where the risk of one of these vehicles entering the cordoned off zone in the minutes immediately after the explosion takes place is a very high risk,” he said.

    We contacted the home office, Britain’s counter-terrorism authority repeatedly, and we were told they’re looking into it. EBay said fully operational emergency vehicles are not allowed on their website, and they’re reviewing the ads we pointed out.

  • 30 Jan 2018 6:55 PM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    CLEVELAND, Ohio (KTRK) — In shocking body camera video out of Cleveland, police say Cleveland EMS refused to help them transport a man who was shot 16 times to the hospital.

    Cleveland police said they were forced to cross the border into Euclid to help a bleeding man, so they asked their EMS to crossover the border to help as well.

    “They got EMS coming but they’re coming from South Euclid. Can we see if one of our guys can come over here a little faster?” police asked.

    According to police, Cleveland EMS refused to help transport the man to the hospital saying it wasn’t in their jurisdiction.

    “Our EMS won’t come. Their EMS is coming from South Euclid. That’s why I asked if they would come over here. They won’t come because it’s in your city. Even though it’s our victim they won’t come,” police said.

    Cleveland officers were left to scrabble to figure out what to do with the man who was shot and pleading with them for help.

    “Notify Euclid we’re coming in with a male with gunshot wounds. It’s taking too long for EMS to get here,” officers said.

    The Cleveland officers lifted the man off the ground and placed him inside of a police cruiser.

    The police raced from the scene and rushed the man to the nearest emergency room.

    Police say they have no word on the injured man’s condition.

    The City of Cleveland is investigating the incident.

    Original article can be accessed here.

  • 29 Jan 2018 6:54 PM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    In 2016, Adventist Health began delivering healthcare services to Whole Foods’ employees in Southern California. The partnership, in which Whole Foods bypassed insurance companies and negotiated directly for services from Roseville, Calif.-based Adventist, gave the organic supermarket chain access to a tailor-made health plan that it couldn’t get from the traditional insurance market.

    Now the 19-hospital system is looking to scale the care navigation expertise developed while caring for Whole Foods employees to its Medicare accountable care organization.

    Adventist’s experience with Whole Foods helped the system develop a new set of skills. The healthy-eating grocer wanted to give its employees access to a more personalized care experience that integrated health coaching and care navigators. Adventist was able to provide that, and in exchange, expanded its footprint and boosted patient volume.

    “We have a little bit more flexibility as a health system to design around what Whole Foods defines as quality, or what Whole Foods defines as patient satisfaction, which sometimes is different than the traditional definitions,” said Dr. Arby Nahapetian, Adventist’s chief medical officer for Southern California.

    Adventist is one of just a few hospital systems participating in a direct-to-employer contract, but with insurers buying providers and pharmacy chains getting into insurance, direct contracting might be an increasingly attractive way for a health system to remain competitive in an evolving market.

    Direct contracting, in which self-funded businesses eschew insurance companies to partner directly with a healthcare provider, can give the employer more control over the employee health benefit design, and potentially lower the cost of care and improve health outcomes.

    Currently, only 3% of large, self-insured employers contract directly with an ACO for healthcare services, according to the most recent data from the National Business Group on Health. There are several high-profile examples: Boeing Co., Wal-Mart Stores and Lowe’s Cos. are among corporations that have famously shut insurance companies out.

    But with employer-sponsored healthcare costs continuing to climb despite the prevalence of high-deductible plans and narrow provider networks, hospital system executives see more opportunity on the horizon for direct-to-employer partnerships as employers look for new ways to bend the cost curve.

    Meanwhile, healthcare providers—increasingly dealing with competition from all sides of the industry—are all too happy to take the employers’ business and cut middlemen out of the equation.

    “These large providers are thinking, ‘Hang on a second, I could get carved out here,'” said Tom Robinson, partner at Oliver Wyman, noting the threat that some proposed deals—like the CVS Health-Aetna merger and UnitedHealth’s steady march into the provider space—pose to hospital systems. Forming a direct-to-employer contract is one form of protection that helps to diversify the provider’s revenue and brings in more patients, he said.

    How it works
    Without an insurance company standing in the middle, many providers feel better able to care for their patients. Doctors have more flexibility to order the tests or specialty care that they believe is necessary for a patient’s treatment without having to fight through red tape, particularly in direct-to-employer contracts that do away with prior authorization.
    As an employer’s chosen provider, the hospital or ACO benefits from a guaranteed group of patients with known health risks and costs. The provider gets the opportunity to leverage infrastructure that it has already spent time building. And in many cases, providers are able to share in savings if they end up delivering care at a cost lower than the employer budgeted.

    That’s the case with Presbyterian Healthcare Services’ contract with computer technology giant Intel Corp. Albuquerque-based Presbyterian in 2013 entered a shared-risk, value-based direct contract to provide services to workers at Intel’s Rio Rancho, N.M., manufacturing facility.

    Presbyterian is held accountable for hitting key quality and financial metrics, which include targets for patient satisfaction, access to care, and health and cost outcomes. It receives a bonus if it meets those goals and Intel’s benefit costs stay under a set target. Presbyterian is also dinged if costs exceed the target.

    Hitting those targets isn’t easy, said Dr. Jason Mitchell, Presbyterian’s chief medical officer. The partnership reached all of its goals in the first year except for its cost targets.

    Even so, the direct contract allows Presbyterian to innovate and “to fine-tune (its) services to meet the needs of the future, because healthcare more and more is going to be designed to meet the needs of the purchaser and the patient,” Mitchell said.

    While direct-to-employer contracts are an attractive play on the surface, they’re difficult to set up and administer. Employers typically need to have at least a few thousand employees concentrated in one area, and hospital systems need a large physician network and a breadth of ambulatory and specialty-care services, said Steven Valentine, vice president of strategic advisory services on the West Coast at consultancy Premier.

    Not all of direct contracts have been glowing successes. The Providence-Swedish Health Alliance, a Seattle-based ACO that partnered with Boeing Co. in 2015 to deliver services to its Puget Sound employees, dropped out of the deal this year because the contract wasn’t financially sustainable, explained Dr. Rhonda Medows, Providence St. Joseph Health’s executive vice president of population health.

    Medows said Providence had difficulty capturing enough data to anticipate and manage the cost of care. However, from the Boeing experience, the system learned better ways to coordinate care, improve customer experience, and collect and analyze patient data. It’s applying those lessons to other value-based care arrangements with employers and payers, including a contract with Intel in place since 2015, and is in talks with other employers about potential direct contracts.

    Danville, Pa.-based Geisinger Health System’s direct-to-employer approach takes the shape of a center of excellence program. The system partners with a consortium of employers including Lowe’s, Wal-Mart, JetBlue Airways Corp. and others for specific procedures, including spine, bariatric and cardiac surgeries.

    The employers give their workers incentives to choose Geisinger for those surgeries, sometimes covering the entire cost of the procedure and travel expenses for their workers. Employees who choose to go outside of the narrow network pay a significantly higher portion of the costs.

    Geisinger benefits from seeing more patients and receiving a bundled payment for the surgeries, which pushes the system to get the care right every time, said Dr. Jaewon Ryu, Geisinger’s chief medical officer.

    “There’s a rigor that comes from being selected as one of these centers of excellence,” Ryu said. “We like having that rigor applied. It keeps us on top of our game, and it keeps us on our toes for all the rest of the surgeries we do.”

    Original article can be accessed here.

  • 25 Jan 2018 6:53 PM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Due to the ongoing critical shortage of IV solutions used in critical care, FDA is alerting health care professionals of extension of shelf life through which some of these products, manufactured by Baxter Healthcare Corporation, may be used beyond the manufacturer’s labeled expiration date. To help ensure patient safety, these products should have been — and should continue to be — stored as labeled.

    FDA is not requiring or recommending that the identified product codes in the following TABLE 1 be relabeled with their new use dates. However, if replacement product becomes available during the extension period, then it is expected that the product codes in these tables will be replaced and properly disposed of as soon as possible.

    Health care professionals are instructed to squeeze the bags prior to use for verification of no leaks. If leaks are found the bags are not to be used.

    Based on data provided by Baxter Healthcare Corporation and reviewed by FDA, the following extended shelf life is supported for only the product codes indicated in TABLE 1 below for the following products.

    Please contact CDER Drug Shortage Staff at drugshortages@fda.hhs.gov  with questions regarding this table.

  • 25 Jan 2018 8:30 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    After much speculation, Apple is officially bringing medical records onto the iPhone.
    The company issued an update to its Health app on Wednesday, debuting a new feature that allows users to view their medical records on their phones, according to an announcement.

    To launch the beta version that features a new “health records” section, Apple partnered with 12 hospitals and clinics as well as EHR vendors Cerner and Epic, using Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) to facilitate the transfer of medical records.

    Patients who receive care at the following healthcare providers will be able to access their records through the iPhone app, including vital signs, procedures, medications and test results. They will also receive updates when new information is added to their record.
    • Johns Hopkins Medicine – Baltimore, Maryland
    • Cedars-Sinai – Los Angeles, California
    • Penn Medicine – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
    • Geisinger Health System – Danville, Pennsylvania
    • UC San Diego Health – San Diego, California
    • UNC Health Care – Chapel Hill, North Carolina
    • Rush University Medical Center – Chicago, Illinois
    • Dignity Health – Arizona, California and Nevada
    • Ochsner Health System – Jefferson Parish, Louisiana
    • MedStar Health – Washington, D.C., Maryland and Virginia
    • OhioHealth – Columbus, Ohio
    • Cerner Healthe Clinic – Kansas City, Missouri

    “We’ve worked closely with the health community to create an experience everyone has wanted for years—to view medical records easily and securely right on your iPhone,” Jeff Williams, Apple’s COO, said in an announcement. “By empowering customers to see their overall health, we hope to help consumers better understand their health and help them lead healthier lives.” We are proud to collaborate with @Apple to advance interoperability and make personal health care records as convenient as possible for consumers

    Healthcare executives involved in the partnership with Apple lauded the tech giant’s efforts to provide patients with easy access to their medical records.

    “Apple is uniquely positioned to help scale adoption because they have both a secure and trusted platform and have adopted the latest industry open standards at a time when the industry is well positioned to respond,” said Darren Dworkin, chief information officer at Cedars-Sinai.

    Original article can be accessed here.

  • 23 Jan 2018 8:00 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Hospitals are in trouble. Why? Because the conventional wisdom on how to respond to the transition from fee-for-service to value-based payment programs does not seem to be working.

    Consultants insist that consolidation of independent hospitals into regional integrated systems, employing physicians and assuming more financial risk will lead to success. But the results so far are not promising.

    MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston lost $266 million on operations in 2016, and Partners HealthCare in Boston lost $108 million on operations in the same year, according to an article from the Harvard Business Review. Cleveland Clinic, meanwhile, experienced a 71% decline in operating income for 2016, and Providence St. Joseph Health on the West Coast reported a $512 million drop in operating income and a $252 million operating loss in 2016.

    Seven years ago, I anticipated this development and proposed that hospitals must totally rethink their mission and strategy by becoming Community Hubs of Wellness and Health. The traditional clinical delivery system model—organized around a centralized hospital that provides diagnosis, treatment and disease management—simply no longer makes sense.

    Community Hubs of Wellness and Health would:
    • Support a community’s embrace of the Healthy People 2020 program goals, which provide science-based 10-year national objectives for improving the health of Americans
    • Create links between hospitals and other community groups
    • Become a meeting place that is seamlessly integrated into the community
    • House a trusted repository for advice on how to use new technologies—such as digital devices, AI virtual reality—to attain wellness
    • Connect with diverse communities as the demographics of a community changes.

    A recent New England Journal of Medicine Catalyst article outlines a similar analysis of the challenges facing hospitals in 2018. This article envisions a “smaller, faster, more cost-effective [system] in which healthcare is more accessible, more affordable, more personal and closer to home.”

    The authors describe a decentralized care delivery model that is not centered around the hospital and features:
    • Virtual health and remote monitoring as care migrates away from the hospital
    • Community paramedicine modeled after the Geisinger Health System Mobile Health Team
    • Reimagined emergency departments that provide alternatives to inpatient hospitalization

    Making this transition from a centralized to a decentralized clinical delivery system will be difficult. Indeed, comments from hospital executives at the recent J.P. Morgan Health Care Conference indicate that regardless of their stated goal to keep people healthier and out of the hospital, “the truth is they still want their inpatient beds filled whenever possible,” as Axios reported.

    Geisinger CEO David Feinberg, M.D., however, has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal as stating: “I think my job ultimately is to close every one of our hospitals.”

    When I have shared this quotation with state hospital and medical societies, the pushback has been immediate and ferocious. Feinberg may be overstating his case, but he is on the right track. We must reimagine the clinical delivery system—sooner rather than later.

    Kent Bottles, M.D., is a lecturer at the Thomas Jefferson University School of Population Health and chief medical officer of PYA Analytics.

    Original article can be accessed here.

  • 22 Jan 2018 6:49 PM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    The tiny suburb of Hilltop, located just north of Minneapolis, is hosting an experimental mash-up of health care services that’s helping to generate buzz on Wall Street.

    Hilltop is one of more than a dozen locations across the country where pharmacy giant Walgreens has carved out space in its stores for urgent care clinics from MedExpress, a company that Minnetonka-based UnitedHealth Group acquired in 2015.

    The collaboration shows how Walgreens is testing ways of bringing other health care services under its roof, including partnerships that could be part of the pharmacy chain’s future, a Walgreens executive said this month at an investor conference.

    For UnitedHealth Group, the pilot is one example of how the company hopes to shape regional health care markets via its fast growing Optum division for health care services.

    “This is just part of developing an overall higher-performing local health system,” said David Wichmann, chief executive at UnitedHealth Group, after a stock analyst asked about the Walgreens venture during a Tuesday conference call. “This is the future health system that we see delivering considerable value to people.”

    Urgent care centers often consist of a medical office with extended hours of operation, walk-in service and treatment for a variety of current health issues that don’t require a trip to the emergency room.

    Urgent care center sales in the U.S. grew to more than $15 billion in 2017, up 27 from 2011, according to estimates from Kalorama Information, a health care data group in Maryland.

    Operators say urgent care centers offer more convenience for patients while also helping control costs by avoiding unnecessary emergency room trips. Critics question whether urgent care centers simply skim profitable services from other providers, while adding capacity to markets that already have plenty of doctors and hospitals.

    The expansion of the urgent care market has come on the heels of growth in “retail ¬clinics,” a trend launched in the Twin Cities more than 10 years ago. Minneapolis-based MinuteClinic got the ball rolling with small clinics in grocery stores and pharmacies that were staffed with nurse practitioners.

    Ultimately, MinuteClinic was acquired by pharmacy giant CVS, which is based in Rhode Island. Illinois-based Walgreens, meanwhile, also bought into the trend, and currently operates some 400 retail clinics.

    “We see retail clinics and urgent care as complementary and generally serving different patient needs,” said Scott Goldberg, a Walgreens spokesman, via e-mail.

    The urgent care pilot for Walgreens and MedExpress is different because it offers patients a much-wider range of services, in a space that’s about five times the size of a typical retail clinic, said Tom Charland of Merchant Medicine LLC, a Shoreview-based consulting group that follows the market.

    One of the problems with retail clinics, Charland said, is that patient demand has been highly seasonal, with the clinics struggling to attract business outside of cold-and-flu season. Urgent care centers in retail settings might avoid this pitfall, he said, since they are staffed and equipped to handle a broader range of health care problems.

    For MedExpress, a partnership with Walgreens makes sense, Charland said, because big-name retail pharmacies tend to be located in some of the most desirable shopping areas. Walgreens, meanwhile, likely has more square footage than it needs with the growth in online shopping, Charland said, and therefore has room to rent space to the right tenant.

    “It’s a development to watch,” he said.

    Established players in the Twin Cities market are watching, although they sound a bit wary.

    “Ultimately, the consumer will decide if this model is going to be successful, or if they prefer the care coordination provided by a primary care clinic and a relationship with a primary care provider within a system that also provides specialty care,” Wendy Burt, spokeswoman for the Minnesota Hospital Association, said in a statement.

    At the Minnesota Medical Association, the group’s president said that doctors want Minnesotans to have access to affordable and appropriate care. “But convenience also runs the risk of undermining patient-physician relationships and continuity of care, which is particularly critical for patients with chronic or complex conditions,” said Dr. George Schoephoerster in a statement.

    Kevin Ruffe, the chief operating officer at MedExpress, said his company’s health care providers want to help make sure that patients have good continuity in their care. Since opening its first outpost in Minnesota in 2016, MedExpress currently has 11 locations in the state and will open its 12th soon in Rochester. Across the country, MedExpress operates nearly 250 urgent care centers.

    Back in Hilltop, the MedExpress features six examination rooms, an X-ray machine and a procedure room for suturing.
    The urgent care center also offers a half dozen basic tests, from cholesterol to strep throat.

    MedExpress and Walgreens have separate entrances, but there’s also a pass-through door from the clinic to the pharmacy.

    The pilot program — and not Hilltop, in particular — is receiving attention in both retail and health care circles this month after a Walgreens official made comments at the annual ¬JPMorgan Healthcare Conference.

    David Heupel, an analyst in Minneapolis with Thrivent, said the conference is a big deal, and the urgent care-pharmacy pilot is an interesting test. But he added: “In the grand scheme of UnitedHealthcare overall, this is tiny.”

    And like many new ideas in health care, the Walgreens-MedExpress pilot has a familiar feel to some.

    Minneapolis-based Fairview Health Services, for example, has its network of retail pharmacies and has co-located the operations with most of its urgent care centers. A Fairview spokeswoman said by e-mail: “Our first co-located urgent care opened 15+ years ago.”

    Original article can be accessed here.

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