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Wichita doctors offer concierge medicine
Wichita Eagle ^ | 11/10/11 | Jerry Siebenmark

Posted on 11/14/2011 4:53:10 AM PST by markomalley

Wichita physicians Aly Gadalla, Doug Nunamaker and Josh Umbehr are pioneers in the area’s medical community.

They are pioneers in the sense that they are practicing some form of concierge medicine.

Concierge medicine is not a new concept. But the three doctors are in the minority among their physician peers.

By all accounts, the concept is growing nationally. Its growth will be fueled by a shortage of physicians, especially in primary care, as well as a desire by more physicians to take care of fewer patients, the doctors and experts think.

And from their perspective, the Wichita doctors get to practice the kind of medicine they signed up for at medical school.

“I knew this was what I was going to do,” said Nunamaker, a former hospitalist at Wesley Medical Center and Umbehr’s partner in Atlas MD. “I’m seeing fewer patients a day and for more time. The family medicine that I went in to do, we do that every day.”

Umbehr, a family medicine practitioner, started Atlas MD in September 2010, following graduation from family practice residency. Some physicians counseled him to join a traditional family practice first, gain some experience and then ease his way into a concierge practice.

“I was too impatient,” Umbehr said. “I had this vision and wanted to do this as soon as possible.”

That vision is a practice that doesn’t accept insurance and charges patients a membership fee of between $10 and $100 a month, depending on the patient’s age. In return for the membership, patients get 24-hour access to Umbehr or his partner through the phone or e-mail, same-day appointments at the home or office, basic lab work and other services such as ultrasounds. The fee doesn’t cover specialists or hospitalizations, which is why most Atlas MD patients have traditional or catastrophic health insurance.

But the practice doesn’t just encompass people who would have the financial wherewithal for concierge medicine. Atlas MD’s patients cover a broad spectrum of incomes, including those who barely make more than minimum wage, Umbehr said.

Because the practice does not accept insurance, its overhead is low. Besides Umbehr and Nunamaker, Atlas MD’s only other employee is a registered nurse.

More than a year later, Umbehr said the practice has exceeded his expectations.

“I’m about to 350 (patients) and Doug’s probably close to 150,” Umbehr said. “At (the end of) year one, we expected to have 100 patients.”

Umbehr expects the practice to reach profitability soon, especially at the rate – 50 patients a month on average – it’s growing since Nunamaker joined full-time in July. Umbehr has put a limit on the number of patients he and Nunamaker will have, between 400 and 600.

“Our ROI (return on investment) will be growth and maintaining them (patients),” he said.

Both doctors work emergency room shifts to supplement their incomes.

“By and large we’ve grown enough it’s mainly on the weekends,” Nunamaker said about working ER shifts.

A hybrid practice

Gadalla’s approach to concierge medicine is a little bit different.

He said he operates a hybrid concierge practice. That is, Gadalla has a traditional medical practice and a concierge practice. Membership to his concierge practice is $100 a month, Gadalla said. But he also accepts insurance.

He said what his concierge patents get from him is unlimited access to his cell phone number and e-mail, and no wait times for appointments. Those patients can also schedule appointments with him on Saturdays and Sundays at no extra charge.

Gadalla, an internal medicine specialist, launched his concierge practice last year. He declined to specify how many patients he has.

“I have a handsome number, a good number of patients,” he said. “It’s growing every month.”

A growing segment

Concierge medicine is expected to continue growing over the next few years, said Tom Blue, executive director of the American Academy of Private Physicians in Glen Allen, Va.

Blue said an exact figure on the number of concierge practices in the U.S. is difficult because they don’t have to register as a concierge practice. But he said his organization, which was founded in 2003 to support the growth of concierge medicine, estimates there are about 3,500 in the nation.

The first concierge practice was launched in Seattle in 1996. That practice, MD2, is still in business today.

He said the number of concierge practices has doubled in the past year and a half and is expected to double each year for the next two to three years. The primary driver of their emergence is an “unsustainable business model” for large primary care practices that struggle with private and government health insurance reimbursement, Blue said.

But it’s also about physicians wanting to limit the number of patients they see on a daily basis. Nunamaker, Umbehr and Gadalla said the concierge practice gives them a freedom they wouldn’t have in a traditional practice.

“The average traditional practice has about 3,000 to 4,000 patients,” Gadalla said. “Imagine how rushed you are versus the concierge practice that has 300 to 400.

“Medicine should not be like the tag office … where I remember you as number 65.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Extended News; Government; US: Kansas
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 11/14/2011 4:53:10 AM PST by markomalley
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To: markomalley
How do I find out if something like this is in my area ?
2 posted on 11/14/2011 4:58:23 AM PST by knarf (I say things that are true ... I have no proof ... but they're true)
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To: markomalley

Illegal under Hillary’s plan. Eventually will be made illegal under Obamacare. The goal of socialized medicine is to put all medical care under government auspices.


3 posted on 11/14/2011 5:07:22 AM PST by Louis Foxwell (Government must be taken back from the thieves who have stolen it.)
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To: knarf

There is a small group in my area who is doing this but their membership fees are considerably higher. I read about them in the local paper and word of the practice spread through the medical community quickly. Your primary care physician may know if something like this is available. Doctors are watching these practices closely to see how they do. A lot of doctors see it as a way to practice medicine they way it should be done.


4 posted on 11/14/2011 5:17:18 AM PST by McLynnan
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To: markomalley
I see someone has been watching "Royal Pains" on USA network...

ABOUT ROYAL PAINS


USA Network is proud to introduce the Hamptons' newest doctor-on-demand, Hank Lawson (Mark Feuerstein), in Royal Pains.

Hank is a rising star in the New York City medical community, until he loses everything fighting for the life of a patient. With his career stalled and his personal life in shambles, Hank is in need of a new beginning. That's where his younger brother Evan (Paulo Costanzo) steps in. Fed up with Hank's personal pity-party, he convinces Hank to join him on a last-minute trip to the Hamptons for Memorial Day weekend. When the brothers crash a party at the home of a Hamptons billionaire and a guest falls critically ill, Hank saves the day. His dramatic medical rescue draws attention from the crowd, and soon Hank's phone starts ringing off the hook with patients demanding house calls.

Inadvertently, Hank has become the hot new "concierge doctor" in town.

Though Hank is initially reluctant to embrace this new career, with encouragement from Evan and an ambitious young woman who volunteers to be his physician assistant he decides to stay in town for the summer. Once again solving medical crises and helping those in need, Hank is back to doing what he does best. And now he's reinvented himself as the Hamptons' hottest new doctor-in-demand.

Also starring Reshma Shetty and Jill Flint with Christine Ebersole and Campbell Scott.

5 posted on 11/14/2011 5:20:55 AM PST by raybbr (People who still support Obama are either a Marxist or a moron.)
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To: markomalley
Oh, Wichita doctors ... not witch doctors.
6 posted on 11/14/2011 5:28:15 AM PST by Tax-chick ("Without common referents, we are all merely inarticulate refugees from Babel."~Nicknamedbob)
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To: Tax-chick
Yeah, that's how I saw it too :) Ooh, eee, ooh ah ah.

There is an Orlando doc who was advertising her practice via Facebook ads.

7 posted on 11/14/2011 5:34:04 AM PST by NonValueAdded (At 4 AM, it is a test; at 2 PM, it is a demonstration)
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To: raybbr

Like that program a lot.


8 posted on 11/14/2011 6:05:16 AM PST by Reagan69 (I supported Sarah Palin and all I got was a lousy DVD !)
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To: raybbr

Like that program a lot.


9 posted on 11/14/2011 6:06:03 AM PST by Reagan69 (I supported Sarah Palin and all I got was a lousy DVD !)
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To: markomalley

Medicare cuts are again looming (up to 30% reduction in doctor’s fees), paperwork and claim submission is costly, and regulatory risk and audits are very dangerous. Physicians will drop out and although we never know exactly how these things will play out, the exodus from Medicare and Medicaid could go from a trickle to a stampede.
It is not clear whether the Left intends to rapidly implode the medical system creating a crisis necessitating “decisive’ action, or more likely, they will keep the system afloat until the election. It does appear that the Leftists want to drastically increase non-physician care.


10 posted on 11/14/2011 6:25:52 AM PST by grumpygresh (Democrats delenda est)
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