Direct Primary Care or Concierge Medicine. What Business Model Is Best For Me?
Many doctors have chosen to partner with large franchise concierge medicine businesses to help with the startup and transition needs necessary to open their concierge medicine practice. However, more than half of all concierge physicians have opted to use accountants, attorney's, practice managers and business consultants to navigate their way into the new practice model. As more and more doctors begin to analyze and potentially move into concierge medical practices, independent physicians choosing not to be a part of a large franchise operation instead are transitioning with a smaller consultant should examine their fee structure and price them competitively.
A private consultant specializing in Direct Primary Care
models says he performs a thorough analysis of the practice and determine areas
where expenses will be reduced. After a survey of the physicians patients, he
conducts a 12-16 week conversion. Fees are collected during the transition
only. Once a successful conversion has been completed, he helps to train the
physician staff to provide membership services. If customer service is
maintained, he knows the practice will continue growing without a need for
further services.
Most doctors currently practicing concierge medicine as a
career choice fall into one of two intelligence-gathering categories when they
first opened. First, they used a franchise concierge company to help them with
the details or they opted to do it themselves and surround themselves with a
local team that would provide counsel in starting this practice model.
The Collective found over the past four years that concierge
doctors operating under the direction of a large franchise concierge company or
consultancy will price services, on average, between $1,200 and $1,800 per
patient and opening with a patient load between 300-750 patients. This helps
the practice compete with local retail clinics, pharmacy chains, primary care
doc-in-a-box practices and attract, en masse, the demographic that practice
needs in order to succeed in their local market. They also found that many
independent concierge doctors who chose not to operate under the guidance of a
franchise business model were charging much more for their services, between
$2,500 - $5,000 per patient, and opening with a patient load of 75-180 patients
under their care.
The premise of most franchise concierge medicine business
models, termed "Fee For Non-Covered Services Model," reduces the size
of a medical practice to a more manageable patient load and these patients
agree to pay a fee for more time with their physician, an annual physical, and
more personalized access and service. Emphasis is on a healthier lifestyle,
both for the members and the physician. According to a national poll of
concierge doctors from 2010-2012, approximately 80% of these practices accept
most major insurance plans and participate in Medicare.
The "Fee For Non-Covered Services Model" allows
for Medicare and private insurance to be billed by the physician for routine
visits and procedures. To date, this model comprises the largest segment of the
market, approximately 46 states, although Direct Primary Care (Fee For Care Model),
is rapidly catching up in select markets, according to The Collective.
Distinct advantages for selecting the "FNCS" model
are:
Physicians who are looking to slow down without affecting
their current income levels will find this model attractive. These types of
models offer an enhanced physical (or some enhanced procedure or procedures not
covered by Medicare), on an annual basis, which is the basis for the entire
fee. Fees for these models usually range from $1,200 - $2,000. It is critical
that physician converting to this business model are able to reduce expenses to
accommodate this type of practice.
There is typically a maximum number of patients allowed to
join the practice, usually around 600. Industry sources report that they have
not seen too many of these concierge medicine practices reach the 600
patient-member level, but that most are satisfied at the 400 patient-member
level.
Contrary to what people think, this model is not just for
the rich as the vast majority of patients make less than $100K, according to
industry surveys. The concierge medicine industry has been touted by the media
and television for years as an expensive way to see the doctor you've known for
years. At the inception of the movement in the early to mid-'90's, this was factually
true. What's not truthful is that nearly two decades later, the majority of
concierge medicine and direct primary care
near me clinics cost their patients between $50 - $135 per month.
Family Practice Physicians typically offer a family plan
where dependent children up to a certain age are covered free. Internal
Medicine Physicians may offer a similar program but typically for dependent
children between the ages of 16 and 25. Therefore there are many single moms
joining these practices.
There are many development teams and implementation
companies that are helping physicians to convert to these more price
transparent business models. They have every base covered with regards to
ensuring a successful launch. There is nobody in this industry that does it
better. There is a very high failure rate for physicians trying to transition
to this type of model on their own. The conversion process is intense and every
transition has its own unique challenges.
Distinct disadvantages for selecting the "FNCS"
model are:
The FNCS business model works very well when implemented
appropriately. Although a medical practice is considerably smaller and much
easier to manage, there are still existing issues with regards to billing
Medicare and insurance companies, collecting co-pays, checking patients in and
out, etc. This not only increases operational costs, but most of the problems
surround billing insurance. Alternatively, in other concierge and direct primary
business models, operational costs are much lower because the
physicians/practice do not participate in Medicare or insurance plans. More
about the pros and cons of this in Part 2 of our follow-up article.
FNCS Business Models require that the services paid for by
members are not Medicare covered services. Accordingly, it is critical to have
legal input with regard to structuring this model. Because Medicare regulations
are likely to change frequently, especially with the healthcare reform act
recently signed into law, ongoing legal monitoring is necessary in this type of
model.
No comments: