flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Urgent care centers: True pioneers of retail healthcare delivery

Healthcare Facilities

Urgent care centers: True pioneers of retail healthcare delivery

Hospitals, either individually or in joint ventures, run 37% of U.S. urgent care centers.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | February 3, 2017

Pixabay Public Domain

The nearly 7,100 urgent care centers operating in the U.S. see nearly 160 million patients a year, according to the latest estimate by the Urgent Care Association of America (UCAOA). To say the competition for these patients is fierce would be an understatement: Urgent care is about as close to retail as healthcare gets.

According to the UCAOA’s 2015 “Benchmarking Survey,” urgi-centers are open an average 4,100 hours a year (equivalent to about 12 hours a day); 96% are open seven days a week. One-third (34.1%) are located in shopping centers or strip malls; another third (33.2%) are in freestanding buildings. The rest are in medical office buildings (19.1%) and mixed-used facilities (13.6%). Physician groups and investors own the greatest share of urgi-clinics, nearly 40%.

For-profit retail chains predominate, led by the Concentra division of Select Medical (300 urgi-centers in 40 states) and U.S. HealthWorks Medical Group (174 centers, 21 states). Corporate and non-physician investors control 23% of urgi-clinics, according to the UCAOA.

Health systems have been developing their own networks of urgent care clinics. Hospitals, either individually or in joint ventures, run 37% of U.S. urgent care centers.  Ted Matson, Vice President of Strategy for Sutter Health, which operates 24 urgent cares in Sacramento, Calif., recently compared these clinics to retail shopping centers because they provide lower cost and faster service compared to visiting a doctor’s office.

Other health systems with multiple urgent care centers in their portfolios: Dignity Health, which operates 41 urgi-clinics under its banner, with eight more planned for this year (in 2013, Dignity acquired U.S. HealthWorks, which operates more than 200 occupational health and urgent care centers in 22 states); Centra Care – Florida, Maryland, and Kansas (38); Aurora Health Care – Wisconsin (34); Intermountain Health Care – Utah (32, plus six co-located pediatric urgent care centers); and Carolinas HealthCare System – North Carolina (29).

“Design is now focused on branding,” says Luis Cano, AIA, LEED AP, EDAC, NCARB, Principal and Senior Vice President in the Miami office of Gresham Smith and Partners.

GS&P designed its first urgent care center 14 years ago. Since then its healthcare work has been exclusively for hospitals, which see urgent care as a way to “project their influence into geographic areas where they otherwise wouldn’t be,” says Cano. Architecturally, he says, the brand “perpetuates the cohesiveness of the healthcare system.”

GS&P’s hospital clients don’t usually come in with preconceived ideas for the design of their clinics, but they do know what works for them, says Cano. “They listen to us, and what we come up with could be a different solution for each client,” he says.

GS&P is the architect on two urgent care centers for Jackson Health System, which last September opened its first UHealth Jackson Urgent Care center, a 4,100-sf facility in Miami’s Country Walk Plaza. In 2017, Jackson Health System plans to open urgi-cinics in North Miami, Doral, and Cutler Bay, and at its existing North Dade Health Center, Miami Gardens.

Other AEC firms involved in UHealth Jackson projects: MGE Architects, G&G Engineering Group, Gartek Engineering, RC Construction, Harbour Construction, and BDI Construction.

Brian Martin, AIA, LEED AP, EDAC, Senior Designer in SmithGroupJJR’s Healthcare Studio, in Washington, D.C., is also seeing urgent care centers popping up in local retail spaces. “We have to design them for the specific needs of their locations,” which he says limits his firm’s leeway over the design.

Urgent care centers are considered ambulatory construction, using a B-plus business occupancy standard. Their construction budgets are bare bones. “They are not intended to be flagships,” says Martin.

Martin believes the Walmartization of healthcare at the retail level will continue. His firm has worked with one of the nation’s biggest healthcare systems, Kaiser Permanente, to develop what could be a template for urgent care centers. “The providers are realizing cost efficiencies on their own,” he says. 

Related Stories

| Feb 28, 2012

Griffin Electric completes Medical University of South Carolina project

The 210,000-sf complex is comprised of two buildings, and houses research, teaching and office areas, plus conference spaces for the University.

| Feb 22, 2012

CISCO recognizes Gilbane for quality construction, design, and safety

The project employed more than 2,000 tradespeople for a total of 2.1 million hours worked – all without a single lost-time accident. 

| Feb 14, 2012

The Jackson Laboratory announces Gilbane Building Co. as program manager for Connecticut facility

Gilbane to manage program for new genomic medicine facility that will create 300 jobs in Connecticut.

| Feb 13, 2012

WHR Architects renovation of Morristown Memorial Hospital Simon Level 5 awarded LEED Gold

Located in the Simon Building, which serves as the main entrance leading into the Morristown Memorial Hospital campus, the project comprises three patient room wings connected by a centralized nursing station and elevator lobby.

| Feb 13, 2012

New medical city unveiled in Abu Dhabi

SOM’s design for the 838-bed, three-million-square foot complex creates a new standard for medical care in the region.

| Feb 10, 2012

Mortenson Construction research identifies healthcare industry and facility design trends

The 2012 Mortenson Construction Healthcare Industry Study includes insights and perspectives regarding government program concerns, the importance of lean operations, flexible facility design, project delivery trends, improving patient experience, and evidence-based design. 

| Jan 31, 2012

Fusion Facilities: 8 reasons to consolidate multiple functions under one roof

‘Fusing’ multiple functions into a single building can make it greater than the sum of its parts. The first in a series  on the design and construction of university facilities.

| Jan 31, 2012

Suffolk Construction to manage Lawrence & Memorial Hospital Cancer Center project in Waterford, Conn.

Leading construction management firm overseeing one of first healthcare projects in the country to utilize innovative IPD process.

| Jan 16, 2012

Suffolk completes construction on progressive operating suite

5,700 square-foot operating suite to be test bed for next generation of imaged-guided operating techniques.

| Jan 4, 2012

HDR to design North America’s first fully digital hospital

Humber River  is the first hospital in North America to fully integrate and automate all of its processes; everything is done digitally.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021