CONCIERGE MEDICINE
“You had to pay the fee, or the doctor wasn’t going to see you anymore.”
That was the takeaway for Terri Marroquin of Midland, Texas, when her longtime physician began charging a membership fee in 2019.
Americans are paying for the privilege of seeing a doctor — on top of insurance premiums that cover most services a doctor might provide or
order. Many people seeking a new doctor are calling a long list of primary care practices only to be told they’re not taking new patients.
Annual fees range from $199 for Amazon’s One Medical (with a discount available for Prime members) to low four figures for companies like MDVIP and SignatureMD
that partner with physicians, to $10,000 or more for top-branded practices like Massachusetts General Hospital’s.
Liz Glatzer felt her doctor in Providence, Rhode Island, was competent but didn’t have time to absorb her full health history. “I had a double mastectomy 25 years ago,” she said. “At my
first physical, the doctor ran through my meds and whatever else, and she said, ‘Oh, you haven’t had a mammogram.’ I said, ‘I don’t have breasts to have mammography.’”
In 2023, after repeating that same exchange during her next two physicals, Glatzer signed up to pay $1,900 a year for MDVIP, a concierge staffing service
that contracts with her new doctor, who is also a friend’s husband. In her first couple of visits, Glatzer’s new physician took hours to get to know her, she said.
Deb Gordon of Cambridge, Massachusetts, said she is searching for a new primary care doctor after hers switched to concierge medicine — a challenge that involves finding
someone in her network who has admitting privileges at her preferred hospitals and is accepting new patients.
https://kffhealthnews.org/news/article/concierge-medicine-primary-care-doctor-pay-to-play/
Concierge medicine is a growing trend, but less than 5,000 membership practices exist in the United States at this time. My doctor asks
permission to conduct a “mini physical” during my annual wellness in exchange for paying a little extra for an office visit. The $126 fee is worth it to me so I agree to pay.
Unlike Advantage plans, Original Medicare does not have networks, mandatory referrals, access to any provider who participates, prior authorization
(for most procedures), etc.