The AP Does A Nice National Article On Direct Primary Care

It’s always nice to see an article that is positive about DPC, especially one that spreads nationally. This article called Direct primary care cuts out insurance companies. Could it gain traction under Trump? does just that. It features Lee Gross, MD, and his clinic in Florida. Read it for yourself but here are some highlights:

  • Direct primary care is an increasingly popular health care option, and experts say it may become more common under health policy changes that President Donald Trump’s administration is expected to pursue. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump’s nominee to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, mentioned direct primary care during his recent confirmation hearings.
  • Direct primary patients say it’s helped them save a significant amount of money on health care, particularly those who don’t have health insurance and would otherwise pay out of pocket.
  • In turn, direct primary care physicians say they can spend more time with patients, and it reduces burnout because they don’t have to deal with insurance companies.
  • “I see direct primary care as a sort of lifeboat for the system … for the cracks in the system,” Gross said. “And we’re continuing to grow and fill these gaps all across the country.”

Of course, they have to throw in the naysayers with the same old rhetoric. It’s called Negative DPC Bingo and the terms are:

  • Only for the rich
  • Not enough primary care doctors to see everyone if they do DPC
  • Abandonment
  • Only for the healthy
  • Not in every community
  • It doesn’t cover everything like hospitalization and specialists, etc.
  • Cherry picking

You have heard it all by now. They are almost all untrue but it doesn’t matter.

Great job, Dr. Gross, and to all you DPC docs out there, keep it up!

(Editor’s Note: Congratulations to Dr. Wendy Molaska, who is also in the article. Great job!)

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