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Boutique Care
Also referred to as retainer-based care, concierge practice and direct care, boutique medicine is a type of private care where doctors often require direct payment for their care instead of insurance.
This allows doctors to charge for not only a diagnosis and treatment but also for the time spent talking with and caring for their patient.
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In an article for Forbes Health, Sequita Richardson, M.D., a family medicine physician said, boutique medicine is often more attractive for doctors than traditional medicine because it allows doctors to avoid many of the complications that accompany insurance.
“Primary care on demand sounds attractive because you can get back to doing what you love to do,” Richardson said.
For patients, boutique medicine allows more time with doctors and easier access to medical services.
While not mainstream or mentioned often in the media, boutique medicine is said to be increasing, particularly amongst doctors.
Even though boutique medicine helps physicians manage their workload, earn more money and provide better services to patients, the system is not perfect, said Russell Phillips, director of Harvard Medical School’s Center for Primary Care in an article for the Scientific American.
Phillips also said concierge medicine can leave many patients without primary care physicians at a time of increasing shortages in primary care clinicians.
In addition to leaving some patients without a primary physician, the heightened expenses of boutique medicine excludes a large part of society that can’t afford the doctor’s specialized care.
According to Forbes, fees of concierge care can total $1,200 to $10,000 a year.
Blevins says boutique medicine can widen economic divides that already exist in medicine today.
“In this situation there is an incentive for good, high-quality doctors to cater to a crowd