A few months ago, I lacerated my lower leg by smashing it into the corner of my car door. I considered just bandaging it but then thought the better of it. My husband drove me the 40 minutes to our nearest urgent care place and they stitched up the laceration. That visit was among those deemed appropriate for urgent care.
According to a recent article in The New York Times, urgent
care is one of the fastest-growing sectors of the U.S. health care system. The number of urgent care clinics has risen from 7,000 in 2014 to over 15,000
in 2024.
Apparently, this rise has been partly driven by the decline
of primary care, that is, increasing numbers of people finding it difficult to
find a regular provider or to be seen quickly. Urgent care is also usually
cheaper and faster than the ER.
Urgent care clinics are designed to handle illnesses and
injuries that come on suddenly but aren’t life-threatening— “episodic”
conditions such as colds, sprains, cuts, and urinary tract infections. Clinicians
can order X-rays and basic blood work. They’re not equipped to handle longstanding
symptoms or conditions. Only about 15 percent of urgent care providers are
doctors. Most are nurse practitioners and physician assistants.
Where I live, we used to have an old-fashioned clinic that took
care of urgent cases. The Dignity Health corporation bought it, closed it, and
moved their staff to a mall a half hour’s drive from our house. When I went to
that office recently to get a tick head removed from my arm, the receptionist
said, “We don’t take walk-ins.” That’s why the number of urgent care clinics
has doubled.
For an introduction to this blog, see I Just Say No; for a list of blog topics, click the Topics tab.