Norman Rockwell vs. Walgreens Definition
of the Physician-Patient Relationship
When I describe it, many of you will
instantly recall the Norman Rockwell painting of a doctor holding a stethoscope
to the chest of a little girl’s doll.
Historian Neil Harris described that
iconic image, published in a 1929 edition of the Saturday Evening Post,
beautifully: “Such a willingness to place professional expertise at the feet of
childhood magic serves to remind us, again, of things we have forgotten: secret
kingdoms inhabited by imaginary beings whose needs seemed as real as those of the
people around us. Rockwell's physician may appear to take the doll's health
seriously as an effort to gain the child's confidence and trust, but his act of
sympathy is also one of grace, accepting his patient's needs with
serenity."
It’s a classic American image, and
meaningful in my profession. Rockwell
knew the importance of rapport between doctors and patients.
This week, Walgreens announced they
will shutter 160 of their “in-store” health clinics to focus on other ways to bring
consumers through their door, like partnering with Jenny Craig weight loss
centers.
Retail clinics like those targeted by
Walgreens are mostly located in drugstores, supermarkets, “big box” retail
settings. Touted as a cheaper alternative to urgent cares and emergency rooms—early
studies showed costs were 30% lower compared to care provided in more
traditional settings—it turns out 58 percent of retail clinic visits represent
a new use of medical services. The study, published in Health Affairs, revealed the
increased use of medical services obliterates any cost savings of utilizing
retail clinics.
Retail clinics are accessible and
convenient. They are open from 7 a.m. to
7 p.m., seven days a week, and staffed by a nurse practitioner or physician
assistant. They treat a variety of minor illnesses such as colds, pinkeye, and
urinary tract infections, and provide an array of preventive services, like vaccinations.
However, retail clinics do not offer big
profits for corporations or big savings for consumers. But then again, is the practice of medicine a
profit-generating machine or an art and science?
It depends on who you ask.
In one of the last conversations with
my grandfather—a solo physician in Tacoma for four decades—he shared his dismay
that home visits were no longer a routine part of medical care. He admonished, “You will never be a good
doctor if you don’t know the environment in which your patients live.” He was probably right.
On the other hand, if you ask Walgreens,
profit margins are prioritized over the art and science of healthcare. And they are going all-in on comprehensive
care for senior citizens. Jim
O’Conor, senior vice president of Walgreens Neighborhood Health Destinations,
said, “We are finding that seniors appreciate not just the high quality of
clinical care, but also the social interactions, the personal attention, the
convenience and the enhanced coordination between their pharmacist, physician
and the health guides we have on site.” Walgreens and Microsoft are developing
a “seamless ecosystem” to connect consumers to providers, payers and others. Approximately
200 retail clinics will operate through new arrangements with large health
systems, to focus on complex issues and chronic conditions to make more money.
Such grand plans disregard the physician-patient
relationship, which is a big mistake. Rockwell’s
painting still has relevance as today’s healthcare market is redefined.
Walgreens “seamless ecosystem” offers
full-service primary care, pharmacy, nutrition, and wellness support. Clinics will be staffed by physician-led
teams, registered nurse ‘care coaches,’ behavioral health specialists and
social workers. The retail giants believe
seniors will flock to “convenient neighborhood health destinations” where they
can get healthcare services where they buy their salad dressing. Target is teaming up with Kaiser Permanente, CVS—of
Minute Clinic fame—is partnering with Aetna, and Rite Aid is working with a
telehealth service provider to expand “virtual care” services.
Is a Minute Clinic on every street
corner really a panacea for the over-60 crowd?
One of the wisest women I have ever
known was Millie, a neighbor and friend who lived well into her 90’s. After her primary care physician retired, she
asked for help to find a new doctor. She
was emphatic about having a physician who knew her name and cared to ask her
opinion.
Millie was not willing to get a flu
shot at a retail clinic, so there is no doubt she would not seek care at one
when she was ill. In fact, I visited her
home to give her the influenza vaccine myself over the years. She would often speak fondly about the doctor
she had as a child. It is during one of those
home visits when I first learned Millie had lost her father to influenza during
the epidemic of 1918.
It seems perverse to deliver healthcare
services at a place called the Minute Clinic. The kind of physician-patient
relationship that can be cultivated in a minute is not one to write home about.
While CVS and Walgreens see geriatric
primary care as yet another untapped gold mine, for me, the relationship
memorialized in Norman Rockwell’s “Physician” resonates as much today as it did
90 years ago. Seamless ecosystems are no
match for a “willingness to place professional expertise at the feet of
childhood magic.”
The bond Millie and I shared was
magical. And every patient deserves a
physician who knows their name.
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