A recent Medical
Economics article
asked “Is the DPC model at risk of failing?” The piece focuses on two large DPC-like organizations,
Qliance Medical Management of Seattle, Washington and Turntable Health of Las
Vegas, NV, working in partnership with Iora Health, which recently closed their
doors. Qliance and Turntable were not actually
DPC practices by strict definition; they were innovative large business
operations providing healthcare services to patients and excluding third party
payers. Their idea was commendable, but
their closure indicates little cause for concern in regard to the growing
Direct Primary Care movement.
Robert
Berenson, MD, who admits to not being a fan of the DPC model, said “Qliance has
been the poster child for DPC… If that one can’t make it… it suggests the
business model (of DPC) is flawed.” He is correct about one thing; the “business”
model of medicine is certainly flawed. What
he does not realize is DPC is not a “business” model; it is a “care”
model. Whether accepting insurance or DPC in
structure, we already know solo and two-physician practices deliver the best care
and have been doing so for the past 100 years.
These intimate clinics know their customers better than anyone else in
the industry, and can devote the time necessary to their clientele; these
micro-practices should be known as the small giants of healthcare.
Strictly
defined, Direct Primary Care is where a patient and physician enter into a
contract to provide unlimited primary care services for an affordable monthly
fee (less than $100/month.) 80% of
healthcare needs can be met in a DPC practice. The typical DPC practice has 1
or 2 physicians, 600 patients maximum per physician, and on average each
physician sees 10 patients per day.
Employees are minimal, usually including a receptionist and/or medical
assistant. Only minimal office space is
required to run such a lean operation, so overhead remains low. Supplies, medication, and equipment are
purchased on an as needed basis and used only when necessary.
Qliance,
founded in 2007 by Dr. Garrison Bliss and Dr. Erika Bliss, charged $64/month
for adult members and $44/month for children.
They had 13,000 patients in total including primary care and emergency
care services, more than 20 times the number of patients compared to a
traditional DPC clinic. They were trying
to use a model embraced by the small giants yet contort it into something
entirely different simultaneously. After
10 years, the experiment failed.
Iora
Health, vying to become the “Starbucks” of
healthcare, was in partnership with Turntable Health utilizing a “team based” concept. Each “team” included a physician, nurse, and
a health coach. This model contracted
with individuals, but also employers and unions already paying for healthcare by
offering improved access to primary care services and pocketing a portion of
the savings that materialized. In this
model, physicians usually had 1000 patients and each health coach with a few
hundred. Turntable charged $80/month for
adults and $60/month for children to have access to their vision of a “wellness
ecosystem”, which included yoga, meditation, and cooking classes.
An article
in the New York Times quoted Duncan Reece, the VP of Business at Iora Health,
“We wanted to do something radically different and show this isn’t your
grandfathers’ doctor’s office.” Can
someone please tell me what was wrong with that model? It was a quintessential small giant of the
business world. My grandfather was an
outstanding general practice physician with a small office and one nurse on
staff. He made house calls. He did appendectomies, tonsillectomies,
C-sections, vasectomies, and met most of his patients’ basic primary health
care needs for 40 years. Why do we need
something radically different?
The bottom
line is healthcare requires two people – one physician and one patient. While it is a nice idea, we do not need yoga,
massage, or smoothie bars in our clinics to improve patient outcomes. Adequate medical knowledge and time for
meaningful conversations is essential; something the small giants of healthcare
are experienced in providing. The vision
of a “wellness ecosystem” should probably go the way of the “patient-centered
medical home,” as there is little cost savings or difference in outcomes
compared to the traditional fee-for-service system.
So what
qualities make the best practices? According to a study conducted by The
Peterson Center on Healthcare at Stanford, the very
best primary care practices have
either one location or a small handful of them.
Stanford compiled a list of 10 distinguishing features of these top
practices and many are commensurate with being a “small giant” of the business
world. My favorite characteristic on the
list is to invest in people, not space or equipment. By lowering overhead, physicians are not relying
on patient volume to generate adequate income.
These practices are consciously choosing to stay small by renting minimal
space and investing in added services only when believing them to be more cost-effective.
The
government and insurance companies cannot fix healthcare. It is up to physicians and patients– one
micro-practice or DPC clinic at a time. Dr.
Kimberly Legg Corba, owner of Green Hills Direct Family
Care, said “The DPC model is growing and practices are converting all the
time. Some are opening by transitioning
an established practice, some are physicians starting clinics fresh out of
residency from scratch, and others are leaving employed positions to return to practicing
medicine in a way they love.”
While my
practice is not DPC, it is a small, old-fashioned clinic serving families for as
long as three generations. Our records
are still on paper, a real human being answers the phone when it rings, and for
occasional emergencies, patients stop by my house for a “reverse house call.” My belief in the DPC model is steadfast
because any “care” model placing control directly into the hands of physicians
and their patients is worth fighting to preserve and protect. The more small giants able to thrive in the constantly
evolving healthcare landscape, the greater chance physicians have of inciting a
large scale revolution to benefit patients everywhere.
Since the
Affordable Care Act legislation went into effect, mergers and consolidations
have increased by 70%, at the expense of care becoming less personalized and
increasingly fragmented. These large
institutions are profit centers for CEO’s and business executives who have very
little knowledge of what goes on between a physician and a patient. They need the independent practice model to
fail so patient choice is no longer an option.
The small
giants, micro-practices and DPC clinics, will continue to prosper and grow
because a “care” model devoted to preservation of the physician-patient
relationship cannot be defeated. Physicians
must stop being afraid to take that leap of faith, leave employment, and go
back to doing what we love most, caring for our patients and improving their
lives. Physicians should be standing at the bedside,
not in front of computer workstations. Direct
Primary Care is a model for which we should all be rooting; it is transforming
the physician-patient relationship and restoring the practice of medicine to
its noble roots, allowing for the art, the science, and the wholly fulfilled
physician.
My advice
for patients everywhere: Whenever
possible, find an independent practice, whether a solo doctor or direct primary
care clinic, and patronize that physician.
Your care will be more personalized, cost less in the long run, and your
health will be better for the investment you made in yourself.
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