Direct primary care and protocol medicine – what is the difference?

The difference between protocol medicine and direct primary care

Direct Primary Care [DPC] is a term commonly associated with its health care, namely "concierge medicine." Although the two terms are similar and belong to the same family, protocol medical terminology is a term that completely encompasses or “contains” many different health care service models, and direct primary care is one of them.

Similar

DPC's approach, a philosophy similar to their concierge medical lineage – bypasses insurance, establishes a more "direct" financial relationship with patients, and provides comprehensive care and prevention services at a reasonable price. However, DPC is just a branch of the Protocol Medical Family Tree.

As with protocol health care practices, DPC eliminates many of the financial barriers to “getting” care when care is needed. There are no insurance co-payments, deductibles or co-insurance. DPC practices typically do not accept insurance payments, thereby avoiding the overhead and complexity of maintaining relationships with insurers, which can cost up to $0.40 per medical expense [see source below].

difference

According to the source [see below], DPC is a “mass market variant of gift medicine, known for its low price.” Simply put, the biggest difference between “direct primary care” and reservation-based practices The DPC requires a low fixed rate, while the metropolis [although the plan may vary from practice to practice] – usually receives an annual retention fee and promises more "visits" to see a doctor.

According to Today's Protocol Medicine [MDNewsToday]The first official news media in this market, both health care services, provide affordable, cost-effective medical services to thousands of patients in the United States. MDNewsToday It is also the only organization that officially tracks and collects these practices and physician data – including the exact number of concierge doctors and clinics across the United States.

“This primary care business model [direct primary care] provides time for these types of providers to provide more personalized care for patients and a comprehensive medical family approach,” said Qliance Medical in Seattle, Washington. Management company CEO Norm Wu said. “The provider’s incentives are fully in line with the patient’s incentives.”

References and sources

"Doc This Way!: Tech-Savvy Patient and Pros Work Up Healthcare 2.0". New York Post. 4/7/2009.

Who killed Marcus Verby? The Stranger from Seattle, January 23, 2008

“Direct Medical Practices – Uninsured Primary Healthcare Solutions” and Dr. Garrison Bliss [Qliance Medical Group of Western Australia].

"Direct Primary Care: New Brewing in Seattle." Harvard Medical School – WebWeekly. 2008-03-03.

DPCare.org

Qliance.com

ConciergeMedicineToday.com

Direct primary care and protocol medicine – what is the difference? was originally published on Spring

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