Thu. May 2nd, 2024

Here is my next project. We are a very positive group of doctors but the truth is there are some practices that don’t make it and close down. There has never been a Morbidity and Mortality (M&M) investigation about this. (This sounds harsh but I wanted to use medical terms). I plan to spend the next year trying to get to the bottom of this. I can see now that this will not be perfect. It’s tough getting the data but I am trying. I hope to write about this, possibly in a book, but also present my thoughts at next year’s DPC Summit, if they will have me.

Here’s a big ask from you. If anyone knows of a practice can you please email me at [email protected] with the name of the doc and the practice? I will take it from there as far as trying to contact them. (No need to contact me if you already did on FB).

This may end up being more testimonials than anything else but that is still worth it. The key is learning from others and I will try to glean as much information as I can to share with you. Any help you can give me is appreciated.

169240cookie-checkWhy Some DPC Practices Close and What You Can Learn From Them
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By Douglas Farrago, MD

Douglas Farrago MD is board certified in the specialty of Family Practice. He is the inventor of a product called the Knee Saver which is currently in the Baseball Hall of Fame. The Knee Saver and its knock-offs are worn by many major league baseball catchers. He is also the inventor of the CryoHelmet used by athletes for head injuries as well as migraine sufferers. From 2001 – 2011, Dr. Farrago was the editor and creator of the Placebo Journal which ran for 10 full years. Described as the Mad Magazine for doctors, he and the Placebo Journal were featured in the Washington Post, US News and World Report, the AP, and the NY Times. Douglas Farrago, MD received his Bachelor of Science from the University of Virginia in 1987, his Masters of Education degree in the area of Exercise Science from the University of Houston in 1990, and his Medical Degree from the University of Texas at Houston in 1994. His residency training occurred way up north at the Eastern Maine Medical Center in Bangor, Maine. In his final year, he was elected Chief Resident by his peers. Dr. Farrago has practiced family medicine for twenty-three years, first in Auburn, Maine and now in Forest, Virginia. He founded Forest Direct Primary Care in 2014, which quickly filled in 18 months. Dr. Farrago still blogs every day on his website Authenticmedicine.com and lectures worldwide about the present crisis in our healthcare system and the effect it has on the doctor-patient relationship. Dr. Farrago’s has written three books on direct primary care: The Official Guide to Starting Your Own Direct Primary Care Practice, The Direct Primary Care Doctor’s Daily Motivational Journal and Slowing the Churn in Direct Primary Care (While Also Keeping Your Sanity) are all best sellers in this genre. He is a leading expert in direct primary care model and lectures medical students, residents, and doctors on how to start their own DPC practice. He retired from clinical medicine in October, 2020.

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