
FamilyCare’s Integrated Model of Care
Unlike traditional systems that separate mental and physical care (“carve-outs”), FamilyCare’s model streamlines services through unified claims, referrals, and authorizations.
Primary care physicians are the foundation of the healthcare system, providing preventive care, chronic disease management, and early diagnosis of serious conditions. But across the country, there simply aren’t enough doctors to meet patient demand.
Millions of Americans—particularly those in rural areas, low-income communities, and Medicaid-dependent populations—are finding it harder than ever to schedule routine visits, access specialty referrals, or receive ongoing medical care. The primary care physician shortage is not just an inconvenience—it is a public health crisis.
The decline in primary care physicians is being driven by multiple economic, systemic, and workforce-related factors:
Becoming a doctor requires years of education, residency training, and financial investment. Specialists in fields like cardiology, dermatology, and orthopedics can earn significantly higher salaries than primary care doctors, making those career paths more attractive.
The pressure of primary care medicine has led to record levels of physician burnout, causing many doctors to reduce their patient loads or leave the profession entirely.
While urban areas have more healthcare resources, rural and low-income communities face severe physician shortages.
When people can’t access primary care, they delay treatment, rely on emergency rooms, or go without care altogether—leading to worse health outcomes and higher medical costs.
Without a primary care provider, many patients turn to emergency departments for non-urgent medical issues. This drives up hospital costs, strains resources, and increases wait times for all patients.
Primary care physicians play a critical role in managing diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, and other chronic illnesses. Without routine visits:
Primary care doctors detect early signs of cancer, administer vaccines, and provide essential screenings. Without access, patients miss critical interventions that could save lives.
Fixing the primary care shortage requires bold policy changes, increased investment in workforce development, and better support for medical students and practicing physicians.
A strong primary care system reduces healthcare costs, improves long-term patient outcomes, and creates healthier communities.
The physician shortage isn’t a future problem—it’s happening right now. Without intervention, more patients will be left without access to essential care, leading to worse health outcomes and higher costs for the entire system.
Primary care doctors are not replaceable by urgent care clinics, telehealth services, or emergency rooms—they are the frontline providers of preventive, continuous, and comprehensive medical care. Addressing this crisis is not optional. It’s a necessity for the future of public health.
Determinants of Health: Access to Healthcare, Medical Providers, Public Services, Socioeconomics, Insurance
Unlike traditional systems that separate mental and physical care (“carve-outs”), FamilyCare’s model streamlines services through unified claims, referrals, and authorizations.
We’re proud to highlight the work of the Maurice Lucas Foundation (MLF)—a powerful example of how holistic, community-based intervention can transform the determinants of health for underserved youth.
This slide presentation summarizes FamilyCare Health’s 2025 testimony to the Oregon Senate Committee on Health Care in support of Senate Bill 388.
Healthcare on wheels brings primary care, preventive screenings, mental health services, and even dental care directly to underserved communities. These clinics are not just a temporary fix; they are a cost-effective, community-driven solution to a growing healthcare crisis.
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