Surge in Direct Primary Care Growth and How to Stop It

Let’s review the new analysis from Harvard Medical School’s Blavatnik Institute, Oregon Health & Science University, and Johns Hopkins University.

The researchers found that in just five years, from 2018 to 2023, the number of concierge and DPC practices grew by 83 percent and the number of clinicians in those practices increased by 78 percent.

Wow, that’s great!

The share of clinicians in concierge and direct primary care practices who were physicians declined from 67.3 percent to 59.7 percent, whereas the proportion of advanced practice clinicians increased.

Yeah, that’s not so good. Doctors and “advanced practice clinicians” are not the same (training and education are much, much less).

Independent ownership decreased from 84.0 percent to 59.7 percent, whereas corporate-affiliated practices grew by 576 percent during this period.

Umm, this is bad. As predicted here on this blog, one of the biggest risks to the allure of Direct Primary Care is the VC/PE sharks waiting to pounce. And they are a pouncing.

I have a few other things to mention. I cannot read the full article and don’t care to spend the money to. I really wish they separated concierge practices from Direct Primary Care. They are two different animals. Second, I also question their ability to truly attain the real number of DPC practices out there as this has been difficult for even Phil Eskew.

From this study comes this article: FEE-BASED PRIMARY CARE IS RAPIDLY RISING IN U.S., HASTENING DOCTOR SHORTAGES FOR PUBLIC

Really?

  • The number of individual clinicians working in these practices expanded from 3,935 clinicians in 2018 to 7,021 clinicians in 2023.
  • The widespread adoption of these membership-based models targeting higher-income patients creates concerns about a growing general primary care shortage.

7,021 clinicians are hastening the doctor shortage for the public? Not burnout, suicide, doctors quitting, or doctors retiring early?

They use the term clinicians because they added midlevels involved in concierge care or DPC. So the number of doctors leaving the system is way off. Add to that, they are not giving DPC numbers, which are probably around 2500 or 3000.

And that is hastening the shortage? There are 300,000 primary care doctors in the US. So, 1% are leaving and yet this is a travesty in need of a triggering headline. Or this quote from the piece:

“The growth of these models may benefit participating patients and clinicians, but it’s important everyone understands the potential impact these practices have on the health care system at large,” says Dan Polsky, co-author of the study and a Bloomberg Distinguished Professor with joint appointments at the Carey Business School and the Bloomberg School. “We have to consider how the growth of these models may affect access to primary care for the vast majority who can only afford the care covered by their insurance plan.”

Dan, yes, we really need to consider the health care system at large, or what I would call the COLLECTIVE. Maybe some laws should be passed to stop this crime? No more rugged individualism by doctors. That is evil.

“Our research draws attention to the rapid expansion of these models,” Polsky adds. “It’s our hope that by increasing awareness of the rise in fee-based practices, that we’re raising the necessary questions for policymakers to ensure that high-quality primary care remains available for all Americans.”

Yes, Dan, go to the policymakers. These doctors cannot be allowed independence. They must be indentured servants to the system that has been killing them.

“Four legs good, two legs bad.”


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