Total Access Medical - Direct Primary Care Blog

William Kirkpatrick

Recent Posts

Primary Care and the Adult Obesity Epidemic

Nov 28, 2016 by William Kirkpatrick

According to the C.D.C., in 2015, more than 78 million U.S. adults were obese. 

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The Flu: Basics, Protective Actions, Treatment & New Information

Nov 25, 2016 by William Kirkpatrick

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Why Insurance Is Destroying Primary Care

Nov 21, 2016 by William Kirkpatrick

Insurance is the root cause of the many problems and inconveniences patients face in primary health care today. From the overcrowded doctor schedules, packed waiting rooms, and flustered doctors to the overall degeneration of the patient-doctor relationship, insurance is the reason why primary care is failing and why you are not given the quality of care you deserve. 

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4 Reasons Why Patients Switch To Direct Primary Care

Nov 18, 2016 by William Kirkpatrick

When you go in for a visit with your primary care doctor, do you sit in the crowded waiting room for an unannounced amount of time? Does the staff seem overworked? Does your doctor seem flustered? Is he/she rushed to move on to the next patient? Well, these are all typical complaints of today's primary care system. 

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Why Doctors Are Transitioning To Direct Primary Care

Nov 16, 2016 by William Kirkpatrick

In the era of increasing regulatory oversight, more physicians are considering the direct primary care model as an alternative method of practice. 

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How Does Direct Primary Care Lower Health Costs?

Nov 14, 2016 by William Kirkpatrick

How much does the average American pay for healthcare every year? And, would enrolling with a direct primary care practice save Americans more money?

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Top Reasons Why Patients Love Direct Primary Care

Nov 11, 2016 by William Kirkpatrick

It has been studied that patients enrolled in direct primary care experience a 50% reduction in emergency department visits, specialist visits, advance radiologic testing, and surgical procedures compared to patients enrolled in traditional primary care. The only number that increased is the number office visits, which more than doubled from an average of 2 visits to an average of 4 visits per year. Moreover, patients enjoy an improvement in health outcomes while saving on overall health expenditures when compared to those navigating the traditional health insurance system.

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Delaware: The Growing Demand for Direct Primary Care

Nov 09, 2016 by William Kirkpatrick

In previous blog posts I presented the projected shortfall of primary care physicians in Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey. (Research shows that Pennsylvania will need an additional 1,039 primary care physicians by 2030, which is an 11% increase. New York will need an additional 1,220 primary care physicians by 2030, which is an 8% increase. New Jersey will need an additional 1,116 primary care physicians by 2030, which is a 17%increase). Those drastic shortages are only for three states. What's the shortfall in the rest of the country? A study estimates a shortage of 12,000 - 31,000 primary care physicians in the United States by 2025. It is more clear now than ever that the demand for primary care physician services is growing faster than supply.

Delaware

To maintain current rates of utilization, Delaware will need an additional 177 primary care physicians by 2030, which is a 27% increase compared to the state’s current 635 primary care physician workforce. The graph below projects that Delware's demand is above the overall demand in the U.S. but below the demand within the southern states. 

Pressures from a growing, aging, and an increasingly insured population create the growing demand for primary care physicians in Delaware.

The graph below shows the increased demand for primary care physicians in Delaware by 2030 is due to three factors: an aging population, a growing population, and the pressures felt from an increasing number of insured Americans due to the Affordable Care Act. 

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New York: The Growing Demand For Direct Primary Care

Nov 07, 2016 by William Kirkpatrick

In previous blog posts I detailed the current state of primary care in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. In those two states, the demand for primary care physicians is surpassing supply, leading to worry amongst government regulators and healthcare professionals. In New York, the demand isn't projected to be quite as high but the effects on consumers remains the same. 

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7 Benefits of Direct Primary Care for Employers

Nov 04, 2016 by William Kirkpatrick

Many employees consider health insurance coverage their most important benefit. In fact, many employees believe health benefits are nearly as important as salary. Health insurance isn’t the sexiest of benefits, but it’s probably the most valuable. A catastrophic health problem can bankrupt even someone making a six-figure salary, and unpaid medical bills were the leading cause of U.S. bankruptcies last year. 

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