HealthDay News — Direct primary care, where clinicians bypass insurance companies, is an emerging business model, according to an article published in The Boston Globe.
The article describes this new business model, where doctors stop accepting health insurance and charge a flat monthly fee for a certain number of visits per year, as well as being accessible by e-mail and telephone.
Direct primary care is an offshoot of concierge medicine, although concierge physicians usually bill insurers as well as charging monthly fees.
Direct primary care clinicians bypass insurance and patients pay fees, which are often less than $100 per month. Patients still need health insurance to cover the costs of serious illness and comply with the federal Affordable Care Act. The fees for direct primary care tend to vary by age and may be unaffordable for many middle- and lower-income families. The model is growing as more overwhelmed primary care physicians search for alternatives; a study from the Massachusetts Academy of Family Physicians suggests almost 9% of physicians are considering switching to direct primary care.
“Primary care lends itself to the direct model, advocates say, because primary care works best when doctors and patients develop strong relationships and discuss and manage health issues before they worsen to the point where patients end up in hospitals,” according to the article.