By now, the little kiosk is a familiar sight: A solo nurse practitioner, a price list on display, a busy retail location.
But the name on the sign is new: Hennepin County Medical Center.
Minnesota's biggest public hospital opened its first retail clinic in February, at a Wal-Mart in Bloomington, almost 10 miles away from its campus downtown.
Its debut comes at a strange time in the retail clinic business. Since the precursor to MinuteClinic started in the Twin Cities a decade ago, everybody from grocers to drugstores to hospitals has opened versions of the bare-bones clinics, offering fast care and low prices without appointments. There are now about 1,200 outlets around the country, according to the Convenient Care Association, a trade group.
Yet the industry is going through an awkward adolescence. It's no longer the brash young upstart, but neither is it quite sure what it wants to be when it grows up.
Many consumers like the retail clinics, but operators have found it hard to make money, mainly because the business is highly seasonal. Faced with long, quiet periods between flu seasons, and stiff competition from deep-pocketed, established players such as MinuteClinic and Target Clinic, many operators have closed unprofitable outlets. Some are adding new services, in a bid to drum up more regular traffic, while others have gotten out of the business altogether.
HCMC officials appear undaunted.
"Models of care are evolving very quickly right now," said Dr. Steve Sterner, who oversees clinics for HCMC. "A lot of us believe retail clinics can play an integral role in these models."