5 Hassle-Free Ways To See A Medical Professional -- Fast

Spend less money—and less time waiting—to get your medical needs met.
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Some years ago, my husband cut his finger on a too-sharp knife while peeling a cucumber, and no matter what he tried, he couldn't stop the bleeding. Because it was a Sunday night, there was no use calling our doctor. So, off he went to the over-crowded emergency room, returning many hours later.

Fast forward to today, when he would have been able to go to a local walk-in clinic, and be seen almost immediately by a nurse practitioner or an M.D., saving hours of waiting and discomfort.

Walk-in clinics are just one of many alternative health care options these days.

#1: Retail Clinics

Best for: As a back-up when your own doctor is unavailable and for simple ailments like bronchitis, inner ear infections, conjunctivitis, and sinusitis. Plus, these clinics provide some level of preventive care, from immunizations to screening blood tests.

Want to treat a sore throat in a hurry? You might try a retail clinic. Typically found in pharmacies, groceries and “big box” stores, retail clinics are staffed by nurse practitioners and doctors, and as a whole they received almost six million visits in 2009, according to the Rand Corporation.

No appointment is necessary, and the convenience of weekend and evening hours is a solid draw for many. Pricing is transparent – you know what you’re paying before you pay for it, and most accept health insurance; in fact, costs at retail clinics are substantially lower than similar treatment at doctor’s offices and emergency departments. 

Limitations: They cannot treat sprains, strains, or fractures, or monitor chronic illnesses.

#2: Urgent Care Centers

Best for: Illnesses or injuries that are not life-threatening, but need immediate treatment, including accidents and falls, sprains and strains, moderate back problems, bleeding/cuts, fever or flu, etc.

Also known as Immediate Care, Walk-in Care or Convenient Care, these centers have been around for decades, yet they’re still seeing an upswing in growth. (Some popular names in the game are NextCare, MedExpress, Doctors Express.) 

Urgent care centers are staffed by trained and licensed physicians and medical assistants, x-ray technicians and registered nurses, with nearly one-third of them owned and operated by hospitals. They can perform x-rays and some on-site lab tests, plus procedures like suturing and casting. In some communities, these centers can function as primary-care practices, and may handle ongoing care for some chronic conditions.

Limitations: These centers do not provide emergency medical care, or treat conditions that could threaten or impair your life, such as poisoning, moderate to severe burns, severe chest pain or difficulty breathing, seizures, serious head, neck or back injury, etc.

#3: Nurse-led Practices

Best for: Diagnosing, treating and working with patients to manage their care. Their training emphasizes wellness and overall health, and they can be a source of excellent overall care.

Advanced practice registered nurses, or APRNS, are nationally certified registered nurses who have completed master’s or doctoral programs. APRNs order and interpret diagnostic tests and make diagnoses; initiate and manage treatment plans and can prescribe medication. 

Tay Kopanos, vice president, state government affairs for the American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP) says, “The healthcare system is now seeing the benefits of patient access to nurse practitioner-provided health services, and many patients are now choosing NPs as their primary-care providers.” 

One study in the British Journal of General Practice noted that nurses “tended to provide more information to patients,” as well as give longer consultations than doctors. The study also found no significant difference in patient health outcomes between doctors and nurses in terms of emergency care.

Limitations: Some states don't allow them to see primary care patients without supervision by a physician, and some deny admitting privileges to nurse practitioners.

#4: Physician's Assistants (PAs)

Best for: When you can’t get in to see your doctor, a PA can take a comprehensive health history, conduct a thorough physical examination, make a diagnosis, and set up a treatment plan. If the case is complicated, they have immediate access to a physician.

PAs have extensive medical training and may provide many of the same services as physicians themselves; numerous independent studies find the quality of the medical care to be equivalent to that of physicians. They take patient medical histories, order and perform tests, develop treatment plans, counsel on preventive healthcare and may prescribe medication and even assist in surgery. Rather than waiting months to see a physician specialist, PAs can streamline your care and carry out tasks like X-rays, CAT scans and some small procedures like suturing or casting a broken limb. 

Limitations: Their scope of practice may be limited by their supervising physician and state laws. In some states, they cannot prescribe controlled substances.

#5: Group Visits

Best for: People with chronic illnesses like diabetes, hypertension or asthma. You get more time than with an individual appointment (90 minutes vs. 15), plus the opportunity to share ideas and create a bond with other patients.

For patients with similar medical conditions, group visits (a.k.a. Shared Medical Appointments, or SMAs) can take the place of a one-on-one visit with a physician. Depending on the condition being addressed, they may be staffed by nurses, nurse practitioners, Certified Diabetes Educators, trained psychotherapists, or social workers, and can include family members and help with education, teaching skills for self-management and strategies for lifestyle and behavioral changes.

Group visits also give you access to both your physician and other members of a health care team like nutritionists, behaviorists or health educators. According to the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), group visits “are a proven, effective method for enhancing a patient’s self-care of chronic conditions, increasing patient satisfaction, and improving outcomes.”

Limitations: Some people prefer the privacy of a one-on-one visit with their doctor, rather than a group setting.

What’s fueling the alternative healthcare boom?

Why so many new options? For one, it’s becoming tougher to find a primary care physician, because demand is outpacing supply: Due to a lack of prestige and relatively lower pay, the number of medical students and residents going into primary care is declining. At the same time, the 65-and-older population is expected to grow 46 percent between 2014 and 2025, and 30 million Americans have become newly insured thanks to 2010's Affordable Care Act. The Association of American Medical Colleges projects a shortage of 12,000-31,000 primary care doctors by 2025.

On the practical side, “patients may not be willing to disrupt their entire lives or miss work to see their own doctor,” says Don Goldman, M.D., chief medical and scientific officer of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement in Cambridge, Massachusetts. People rightly sense that there are now other ways to receive basic medical care, he adds.

Read more from Grandparents.com:

5 Best Remedies for Sinus Problems

7 Ways to Ease Joint Stiffness

4 Surprising Everyday Items That Cause Health Problems

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Before You Go

6 Better Questions to Ask Your Doctor
The One Type-A Patients Will Love(01 of06)
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What You're Used to Asking: Before you go, can I ask you a few questions I wrote down?

The Smarter Version: Can we start by going through my list of questions?

Here's why: The average doctor's appointment (from traveling to the office and filling out paperwork to settling the bill afterward) takes more than 2 hours of our time, but we're only with the doc an average of 20 minutes, finds a new study from Harvard Medical School. In that limited time, your doctor is trying to cover issues related to your own health and those that generally apply to women your age, says Lydia Pace, MD, MPH, an internist in the division of women's health at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. Asking your questions up front -- especially those that aren't related to an issue your doctor already knows about -- will help set an agenda that's specific to you and your concerns.
(credit:Photo: Nikita Sobolkov/Thinkstock)
The One That Gets You Up-to-Date On These(02 of06)
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What You're Used to Asking: Can I get my flu shot today?

The Smarter Version: In addition to the flu shot, what other vaccines am I due for?

Here's why: "Vaccines don't end when you turn 18," says Wanda Filer, MD, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians. Adults should get a tetanus shot every 10 years, and these days, it's usually combined with the pertussis, or whooping cough, vaccine. Pertussis can be deadly for infants, and cases among babies have been on the rise in recent years -- vaccinating everyone means infants are less likely to come into contact with it. (Whooping cough can also be brutal for adults who contract it, says Filer, potentially causing coughs so violent they can lead to broken ribs.) Then there are pneumonia, shingles, measles, mumps and rubella and hepatitis A vaccines to consider as well. Ask your doctor what you need and when based on your health.
(credit:Photo: Tonpicknick/Thinkstock)
The One If Kids Could Be In Your Future(03 of06)
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What You're Used to Asking: I'm not in my late 30s yet, so I'm okay fertility-wise, right?

The Smarter Version: What can I do now to help make sure that if and when I want kids, my chances of conceiving are as good as possible?

Here's why: Patients don't bring up fertility enough, says Pace, and it should be on the agenda regardless of whether you're talking to an ob-gyn or a GP, because issues that affect reproductive health span both specialties. "Knowing that you want kids in the near future would, for example, influence the medications your GP puts you on or the birth control they or your gynecologist recommend in the meantime," she says. If you have a chronic condition like diabetes, hearing now that you hope to get pregnant down the road can help your doctor manage your illness with that goal in mind (with diabetes for example, your doc may not want you to try to get pregnant until your blood sugar levels are well controlled). So if you have an idea of what your timeline is like, or, if you know kids aren't in the cards, tell your doctor.
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The Necessary One Nobody Wants to Bring Up(04 of06)
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What You're Used to Asking: How am I doing?

The Smarter Version: How's my weight?

Here's why: Even if weight is an obvious concern, your doc might not say something about it. Among more than 7,700 people, just 45.2 percent of those considered overweight (a BMI of 25 or more) and 66.4 percent of those considered obese (a BMI of 30 or more) were told by a physician that they were overweight, found a study in Archives of Internal Medicine. That's a problem, as excess weight is a risk factor for a number of illnesses, including heart disease and certain cancers. Once you've brought it up, you and your doctor can set a realistic slim-down goal and come up with a plan to make it happen.
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The One for Every Cheeseburger Lover(05 of06)
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What You're Used to Asking: How bad is my cholesterol? Do I need to change my diet?

The Smarter Version: Am I eating enough of the right kind of fat?

Here's why: Good-for-you fats (the mono- and polyunsaturated kind found in nuts, avocados, seeds and fish) help lower levels of bad cholesterol, while saturated fats raise them. Making sure that you're consuming more of the former and less of the latter may have a bigger impact on your total cholesterol levels than cutting back on dietary cholesterol, says Frank Hu, MD, a professor of nutrition and epidemiology at Harvard's T.H. Chan School of Public Health and a member of the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, which recommended that the U.S Dietary Guidelines do away with the upper limit (300 mg per day) earlier this year.
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The One Related to Your Next Visit(06 of06)
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What You're Used to Asking: So, same time next year?

The Smarter Version: When do I actually need to see you again?

Here's why: You're accustomed to checking in with your doctor yearly, but annual exams aren't based on evidence of better outcomes, says Anne Chang, MD, an internist and the medical director of primary care for University of California San Francisco Women's Health. "If I have a patient who's in great health, I may tell them that they don't need to see me for two or three years unless something comes up." On the other hand, if you're having health issues, your doc may want to see you more frequently. Make sure you're leaving with specific marching orders on any changes or improvements they expect to see by your next appointment. Ask your doctor to write down instructions or, if your doctor's office uses electronic health records, ask them to input their directives into the system so you can access them at home as a reminder.
(credit:Photo: kiddy0265/Thinkstock)