Copyright 2006 Chicago Tribune Company

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Copyright 2006 Chicago Tribune Company
Chicago Tribune
June 12, 2006 Monday
Chicagoland Final Edition
SECTION: BUSINESS ; ZONE CN; Pg. 6
LENGTH: 1074 words
HEADLINE: Rise of retail clinics giving doctors a chill;
AMA to make push for more scrutiny of sites staffed by nurse practitioners
BYLINE: By Bruce Japsen, Tribune staff reporter
BODY:
Feeling threatened by the proliferation of retail health clinics staffed by nurse practitioners, the
nation's largest doctors group is pushing this week for increased scrutiny of the clinics and the
nurse practitioners who staff them.
Basically, the American Medical Association has a problem with caregivers like Laura Maxwell.
Maxwell, a 25-year-old licensed nurse practitioner with a master's degree, checks coughs,
gives vaccinations and dispenses other routine medical care at The Little Clinic in a Kroger
grocery store in Louisville.
"We see lots of minor illnesses like colds, sore throats, and write a lot of prescriptions, typically
for viruses," said Maxwell, who views her clinic as a complement to a physician's care. "It's a
place they can go when the doctor's office is closed."
The Little Clinic, which operates eight facilities in three states, opened sites in Mt. Vernon and
Carbondale, Ill., within the last year.
As at most other retail clinics, the operators say their offices are open seven days a week, with
evening hours, and no appointment is necessary. A doctor comes by to review charts and other
decisions made by the nurse practitioners but typically does not see patients.
Such clinics advertise that they will treat patients with routine maladies in 15 minutes or less,
the amount of time you might spend in a waiting room at a doctor's office as physicians pack
more patients into a day.
Clinics are hiring nurses with advanced degrees to fuel their aggressive expansion, and that is
making some physicians nervous about their practices and pocketbooks. They also say it could
affect the care people receive.
Some AMA members say the clinics should not be a substitute for the doctor-patient
relationship and need more uniform state rules requiring closer physician involvement.
The public should greet this new medical-care model with a healthy dose of skepticism, AMA
officials say.
"The AMA is concerned about patients who would seek care in a free-standing clinic and have
a more serious disease that would not be initially diagnosed or diagnosed quickly [in the retail
clinic]," said Dr. Rebecca Patchin, an AMA board member and pain-management specialist who
is a former nurse.
Although nurse practitioners have advanced degrees that can require six years or more of
medical education, Patchin said physicians can have twice the education and training.
"When I was a nurse before I went to medical school, I did not always know what I didn't know,"
she said.
The AMA's annual meeting of its policymaking House of Delegates runs through Wednesday at
the Chicago Hilton. A report and recommendations regarding retail clinics are among the dozens
of topics the group will consider as it decides where to focus its lobbying clout.
Number mushroomed
The AMA's worries come as the number of retail health clinics has mushroomed from less than
a half dozen five years ago to several hundred projected by the end of this year. The clinics are
well funded, with some of the nation's biggest retailers and groceries opening kiosklike clinics,
usually near their pharmacy counters.
Last month, for example, Deerfield-based pharmacy giant Walgreen Co. jumped into the
business, announcing plans to develop more than 20 clinics in its Kansas City area and St. Louis
stores in a major expansion.
More than a dozen AMA delegates testified before a committee Sunday, raising numerous
concerns, including whether retailers were cherry-picking patients in suburban areas.
"I don't think you will find any of these clinics in the inner city," Dr. Arthur Snow, an AMA
delegate and family physician from Shawnee Mission, Kan., not far from Walgreens' targeted
expansion in the Kansas City area. "I'm concerned about the care."
Retail-clinic developers and the nurse practitioners on staff defend the model as an important
and convenient way for consumers to access the health-care system, particularly for the 45
million uninsured Americans who cannot afford traditional doctors.
Walgreens said fees at its retail clinics will range from $48 to $68 but cost less for consumers
with health-care coverage, depending on the person's plan. Most health plans provide some
coverage for clinic visits, which cost less than the $100 or more for a typical doctor's office visit,
industry analysts say.
"Access to care is very important," said Jan Towers, director of health policy for the American
Academy of Nurse Practitioners. "Even with episodic conditions, people end up in an emergency
room because they cannot get into a doctor's office, and that costs the health-care system."
Retail-clinic developers say they are not trying to take the place of traditional doctors and want
to work with them, as is required by state regulations.
Telephone consultations
Yet AMA members say a physician's affiliation with a retail clinic and the nurse practitioner on
site varies widely among states. In some states, AMA members say, a doctor is available only for
telephone consultation.
In Illinois, rules are considered stricter than other states because a nurse practitioner must have
a collaborative agreement with a physician, who must be on site at least once a month to provide
medical direction and consultation. That is not always true in other states, the AMA says.
Among the AMA's recommendations expected to be presented to delegates this week is a
requirement that doctors be involved in the protocols of the clinics, and that nurse practitioners
establish a referral system with physician practices.
"Definitely, you need a closer relationship with a doctor," said Dr. Peter Eupierre, an internal
medicine physician and president of the Illinois State Medical Society.
"It would be very difficult for a nurse practitioner to work totally independent," Eupierre said.
"How can you describe a rash over the phone? Describing a rash is not the same as seeing it
yourself."
Yet supporters of retail clinics say the relationship between doctors and the retail clinics and
their practitioners is fine. They say the AMA is overreacting to something that is filling unmet
medical needs.
"It's a new concept, and there is a lot of preoccupation on the part of the AMA to maintain
oversight for health-care activities," Towers, of the nurse practitioners group, said, adding doctors
shouldn't worry about losing business.
"If a patient has to wait weeks to be seen for something that is acute, they are not going to be in
the doctor's office anyway."
bjapsen@tribune.com
GRAPHIC: PHOTO (color): Laura Maxwell, a nurse practitioner, administers a tetanus shot to
Colleen Casey at The Little Clinic set up in a Kroger store in Louisville. Maxwell views retail
clinics as a complement to a physician's care, but the AMA says it has concerns.
PHOTO (color): Laura Maxwell talks with Colleen Casey and Casey's father, Robert, about the
treatment she administered. Deerfield-based Walgreens plans to open more than 20 such clinics
inside its stores in St. Louis and the Kansas City area. Photos for the Tribune by Brian Bohannan
PHOTOS 2
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