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Walmart closing all its clinics.


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17 minutes ago, Boatswain2PA said:

Concur.  I just wonder how it COULD fail financially.

Random news articles quote a Walmart spokesperson stating, "Healthcare is expensive to run... increased labor and operating costs environment, like with reimbursement... made it difficult and obvious we had to close." 

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1 minute ago, SedRate said:

Random news articles quote a Walmart spokesperson stating, "Healthcare is expensive to run... increased labor and operating costs environment, like with reimbursement... made it difficult and obvious we had to close." 

Yeah, I saw that, just doesn't make sense.  

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On 5/1/2024 at 5:21 AM, Boatswain2PA said:

Probably a good guess.  Along with hyper-regulation and insurance monopolies 

yup. if you are paying a new grad np $50/hr to see URIs at $25/each and they only see 0.5/hr it is hard to make those #s work. 

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These clinics were a bad idea from the start. Large portions of their customer population are in lower socioeconomic brackets, and most likely have poor insurance or no coverage; these are the same pts we see in EM who have multiple concurrent health issues and utilize the ED as their PCP.

Now imagine those same pts going to a Walmart clinic to have all those issues managed, often by an overburdened supervising attending supplemented with undertrained NPs ( and sometimes PAs) addressing several comorbidities in an improperly resourced environment. It borders on predatory behavior, because these pts don't have the wherewithal to set up with a PCP and our legislative bodies view "some healthcare" as better than "no healthcare" (which paradoxically leads to more problems).

Anecdote: A Peds nurse that worked in our ED did her NP coursework on overnight shifts (telling as to how busy they were), got a job in Pain after graduating and transitioned to a Walmart clinic. No experience in primary care whatsoever, no experience with adult pts managing bread-and-butter conditions. We also have several ED nurses in NP school who are looking at PCP jobs, and don't even know about Choosing Wisely or the USPSTF. This is what corporate bodies like Walmart look for.

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Maybe the providers treated it just like a job instead of a profession.  Move slow.  Take breaks.  Do the bare minimum (corp USA takes advantage of the giving nature of health care professionals).   Maybe this was a showing of what happens when providers act like a simple employ and stop working so hard for free??

 

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11 hours ago, ventana said:

Maybe the providers treated it just like a job instead of a profession. ... Do the bare minimum (corp USA takes advantage of the giving nature of health care professionals).   Maybe this was a showing of what happens when providers act like a simple employ and stop working so hard for free??

 

Definitely

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