By Charlotte Huff October
3, 2017
JARRELL,
Texas — Darrell Kenyon had been punting for years on various medical issues —
fatigue, headaches, mood swings. The 43-year-old uninsured carpenter was
particularly worried about his blood pressure, which ran high when he checked
it at the grocery store. Then he heard about a different type of physician
practice, one that provided regular primary care for a monthly fee.
“Insurance
for the self-employed is through the roof,” Kenyon told Dr. Loy Graham, as she
examined him one morning in August. Two years ago, Graham had hung out her
shingle in this central Texas town of nearly 1,400, about 40 miles north of
Austin.
Under
the practice model, called direct primary care, patients are charged monthly —
typically $20 to $75, depending on age, in Graham’s practice — for basic,
office-based medical care and frequently cell phone and other after-hours
physician access. Proponents of the model, which is also supported as a practice option by
the American Academy of Family Physicians, say it can provide a safety net for
those with limited treatment options, including the uninsured and people in the
country illegally. The alternative is particularly helpful in states like Texas
that haven’t expanded Medicaid access, the advocates add.
But
there’s a sizable catch: Direct primary care is not insurance.
Carolyn
Engelhard worries that strapped individuals will decide the easier access to
primary care is “good enough” and won’t investigate insurance options. “It can
be a false security,” said Engelhard, who directs the health policy program at
the University of Virginia School of Medicine in Charlottesville. “There’s sort
of the illusion that it’s kind of like insurance.”
Lower-income
Texans would be better off with coverage on the Affordable Care Act’s insurance
exchange, where they could get a subsidy to reduce the cost of their premiums,
Engelhard said. The policy would have a deductible, “which they might feel that
they can’t afford,” she said. “But they would be protected if they got cancer
or if they had an automobile accident.”
Graham
estimates that at least three-quarters of her roughly 450 patients lack
insurance, even though she advises them to carry some kind of catastrophic
coverage for major health expenses. But the cost for such policies can be
daunting. Like Kenyon, some of Graham’s patients are self-employed with
fluctuating incomes or work for businesses that don’t offer coverage. Even if
their employer offers affordable coverage for the employee, premiums for
dependents might make coverage financially out of reach. Roughly 1 in 5 of her
patients speak primarily Spanish. Some are undocumented, working in
construction and other labor-intensive jobs in the region.
Despite
her concerns, Engelhard said, such flat-fee practices might offer “one of the
few viable options” for those living here under the radar, given they’re not
eligible for ACA-related coverage. “So they are completely dependent on paying
out-of-pocket for medical care,” she said.
‘Better Than Nothing’?
Nationally,
direct primary care is relatively new and very much a niche option. Nearly 3
percent of family physicians practice it, according to a 2017 survey by the
American Academy of Family Physicians. Some critics have questioned whether the
model’s growth is already stalling, after one of its earliest providers, Seattle-based Qliance, closed its
clinics this year.
Graham,
who practiced traditional medicine in Central Texas for decades, said she was
drawn to the option after growing weary of packing too many patients into each
day. She was considering leaving medicine and had started developing a lavender
farm as an alternative source of income when she heard about direct primary
care.
In
2015, she opened her practice in a small strip mall in Jarrell, figuring that
nearby residents — with limited access to primary care — might take a chance on
the different style of medicine.
Dr.
John Bender, an academy board member who is part of a larger practice that’s
transitioning to direct primary care, said that the low monthly fees are
attracting patients who view insurance as out of reach. “I think something [in
terms of medical care] is better than nothing,” said the Fort Collins, Colo.,
family physician, who estimates that roughly half of the practice’s 800-plus
direct primary care patients are uninsured.
“I can
spare them quite a few urgent care and emergency room bills,” Bender said,
noting that his office handles anything from strep throat to stitches for minor
gashes. Moreover, the cost is within reach of people on tight budgets, he said.
“In fact, a carton of cigarettes runs $49, which just happens to be the price
of my monthly subscription fee [for adults].”
In
Texas, 16.6 percent of the state’s residents were uninsured as of 2016, the
highest rate nationally, according to the most recent Census Bureau data. The
Lone Star State didn’t expand Medicaid access and has one of the nation’s
lowest income-eligibility cutoffs. A single mother with two children can’t earn
more than $3,781 annually to qualify for coverage herself, according to a 2017
Medicaid report by the Center for Public Policy Priorities, an Austin-based
nonprofit research and advocacy organization.
Dr.
Felicia Macik, who launched her direct care practice in 2014 in Waco, estimates
that 10 to 15 percent of her patients are uninsured, including some who drop
coverage because they can’t afford the premiums. “I’m frightened for them,” she
said. “It could decimate a family if something happened and they didn’t have
any coverage.”
But
Macik pointed out that getting regular primary care, rather than avoiding the
doctor entirely due to lack of insurance, might avert costlier complications
like an asthma attack or a diabetic crisis.
Uninsured
individuals who sign up for these practices are rolling the dice, said Dr.
Mohan Nadkarni, an internist who co-founded the Charlottesville (Va.) Free
Clinic, which treats lower-income individuals. “For routine regular care, it
may work out,” he said. “But it’s gambling that you’re not going to get sicker
and need further care.”
Two
years ago, Dr. Loy Graham opened a flat-fee primary care practice in Jarrell,
Texas. She estimates that at least 3 in 4 of her patients lack health
insurance.
For
instance, a patient can develop severe heartburn and require further tests and
referrals to specialists to look for the underlying cause — potentially
anything from an ulcer to esophageal cancer — that could quickly run up a hefty
bill, Nadkarni said. Another patient with chest pain might need a similarly
costly work-up to rule out heart problems, including a potentially
life-threatening blockage, he said.
Graham
said that her monthly fees cover anything that she can handle in the office.
During Kenyon’s visit, she froze a small growth off one ear. Shortly afterward,
she gave a steroid injection to an older woman with a painful, swollen wrist.
She has
negotiated low fees with a local laboratory; the battery of blood tests and
urinalysis she ordered for Kenyon cost him just under $40. “This is concierge
medicine for normal people,” said the 61-year-old family physician.
Physician
enthusiasts maintain that jettisoning the paperwork and other overhead costs
associated with insurance enables them to take on fewer patients — roughly 600
to 800 for direct care practices compared with 2,000 to 2,500 typically,
according to the family physicians academy — and thus spend more time with each
one.
As A Safety Net, It’s A Stretch
Erika
Miller first came to see Graham two years ago for severe headaches. The
30-year-old mother of three, who is working on her college degree and has a
full-time job, doesn’t have insurance.
Graham
diagnosed high blood pressure. Getting that under control helped alleviate her
headaches, Miller said. She also has shed 50 pounds under Graham’s guidance.
But Graham
can’t handle everything for her patients. Last year, Miller went to the
emergency room at Scott & White Medical Center in nearby Temple with severe
abdominal pain. It was her appendix, which had to be removed. The safety-net
hospital started Miller on a payment plan based on her income, totaling roughly
$500.
“If the
question is: `Is [direct primary care] better than nothing?’ Then I would say,
‘Yes,’” Engelhard said. But along with leaving uninsured patients financially
vulnerable to a medical curveball, she said, these smaller practices — by
seeing fewer patients per doctor — risk aggravating the nation’s primary care
shortage if they become more common.
Graham
countered that she nearly left medicine, but these days — as she continues to
build her practice — she’s reaching some patients who had previously fallen
through the health system’s cracks. On that summer morning, Kenyon left
Graham’s office with a prescription for a blood pressure medication and an
appointment to return in several weeks to discuss his lab results.
Kenyon
and his wife, Denise, later described how they had signed up last year for a
family policy through the Affordable Care Act. But the monthly premium was $750
and the deductibles were $3,500 per person, Denise Kenyon said.
She
called around and couldn’t find a family doctor who would take the coverage.
After several months, they stopped paying the premiums, figuring that the money
they saved would pay for a lot of medical care.
Both
are now patients of Graham’s; their combined monthly bill totals $125, which
they can budget for, Darrell Kenyon said. “I do have good months and bad
months, as far as pay is concerned,” he said. “If I have a bad month, it’s
still affordable.”
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