The family quick care visit finally helped you find some relief. After a short weekend at a cabin on the Louisiana bayou, everyone in the family was dealing with some kind of issue. From allergies to bug bites to a few cuts and scrapes, the bayou seemed to literally take a bite out of the health of your family. Dealing with lots of scratching and sneezing on the trip home, once you were back in the house you decided that a group visit to the family quick care was in order.
In the end, the family only needed two prescriptions: one for a steroid to deal with some severe bug bite reactions, one for an antibiotic to deal with a sinus infection. For the rest of the family, over the counter treatment options were all that were needed for the rest of the family members.
Fortunately, a neighborhood health clinic can offer many solutions to families who are looking for answers to a variety of symptoms. To bug bites to x-rays and STD testing procedures to strep throat tests, there are many affordable care options available at a medical walk in clinic. Consider some of these facts and figures about the many advantages that walk in health clinics offer and the many kinds of health concerns that bring consumers to these locations:
- Walk in health clinics, by definition, do not require an appointment, so they can help you get answers to the health concerns that you have.
- Although emergency rooms do not require appointments either, the mean wait time in Emergency Rooms (ERs) went up by a quarter, from 46.5 minutes to 58.1 minutes.
- Walk in health clinics also offer less expensive rates when compared to the fact that ER visitors pay total costs of $1,318 and a mean cost of $615, according to The Medical Expenditure Panel Survey.
- Rates of depression in elderly people can range from 3% to 13.5%, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
- More than smoking, inadequate sleep, and dehydration, doctors agree that sun damage can contribute up to 80% of skin aging.
The most recent data indicates that the U.S. will need as many as 52,000 more primary care physicians by 2025 to meet the nation’s healthcare needs. As the country continues to adjust to more and more people having health insurance for the very first time through the Affordable Healthcare Act, the role that walk in clinics play may continue to increase.