Convenient care clinics
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Convenient care clinics (CCCs) are health care clinics located in retail stores, supermarkets and pharmacies that treat routine family illnesses and provide preventative health care services. They are sometimes referred to as “retail-based clinics” or "walk-in clinics". CCCs are usually staffed by nurse practitioners (NPs) or physician assistants (PAs). Some CCCs, however, are staffed by physicians.
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Overview
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Currently, there are over 1,000 CCCs located throughout the United States.[1] Most CCCs are open seven days a week – twelve hours a day during the workweek and eight hours a day on the weekend. [2] Because CCCs are such a new development, only a small percentage of Americans have received health care in a CCC setting.[3] It is estimated, however, that the number of CCCs will increase dramatically in the near future. [4]
The 2008 Survey of Health Care Consumers[5], from the Deloitte Center for Health Solutions, finds the appetite for retail medical clinics is real, and growing, and the potential for future success substantial. The following statistics demonstrate the increase in consumer interest in retail clinics.
- More than 1 in 3 consumers surveyed are receptive to the idea of using retail clinics
- 1 in 6 already have
- Interest in retail clinics is especially high among "baby boomers", with nearly 38 percent saying they would use a retail clinic
- By generation, seniors are the least likely and "generation Yers" are the most likely to use a retail clinic
The survey says that these clinics are particularly popular among those who are identified as:
- Being in better-than-average health
- More distrustful of hospitals and doctors
- More likely to be suspicious of the medications that hospitals and doctors prescribe
Services Provided
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Most CCCs treat adults and children over the age of 18 months. CCCs treat common family illnesses and provide basic psychological care and advice. They are an important source of referral on into more traditional services
CCCs also provide preventative care, including health screenings, vaccinations, and physical exams. They may serve as sample collection points for blood, urine and feces for laboratory tests, which are then sent to external labs.
By definition, CCCs offer a more narrow range of services (usually limited to 25 - 30 of the most common diagnoses) than are offered in traditional primary care offices. [6] This limited scope of services is seen in both nurse practitioner and physician-staffed CCCs, and is an integral part of the CCC model. [7]
See also
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Notes
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- ↑ Healthcare 311 March 5 2008[1]
- ↑ Convenient Care Association, “CCC Factsheet.”[2]
- ↑ California Health Care Foundation, “Health Care in the Express Lane: The Emergence of Retail Clinics." [3]
- ↑ Kaiser Family Foundation, Daily Report, August 24, 2006. [4]
- ↑ 2008 Survey of Health Care Consumers, Deloitte Center for Health Solutions, February 2008. [5]
- ↑ W. Crounse, Microsoft and Health, "Healthcare goes retail," June 28, 2006.[6]
- ↑ QuickHealth, "QuickHealth FAQ." [7]
References
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External links
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- Nighttime Care Centers - Maryland based convenient care clinic
- Health Care in the Express Lane: The Emergence of Retail Clinics (California HealthCare Foundation, July 2006)
- Health Care in the Express Lane: Retail Clinics Go Mainstream (California HealthCare Foundation, September 2007)
- USA Today - “Could Walk-In Clinics Help Slow Rising Health Care Costs?”
- KaiserNetwork.org - “Thousands More Retail-Based Clinics Expected to Open”
- ABC News - "Future of Health Care or Quick Fix?"
- Medscape - "Working in a Retail Clinic: What Nurse Practitioners Need to Ask"
- The New York Times Magazine: "The Year In Ideas: Walk-In Health Care"
- National Post (Canada) - "Attention Shoppers: Flu Shots in Aisle 3"
- Healthcare 311 - Searchable database of US retail clinics, with edited links to latest news on this emerging mode of health care delivery
- Retail Healthcare News is a blog dedicated to news relating to the growing trend of retail-based health care clinics in the United States