MinuteClinic is branching out.
The retail clinic pioneer, which grew into the nation's biggest chain of walk-in clinics with its limited menu of treatments for minor problems -- pink eye, flu, ear infections -- earlier this month launched a new service to monitor chronic conditions.
MinuteClinic chief Dr. Andrew Sussman talked to the Star Tribune about the new "Monitoring Made Easy" program and where he's taking MinuteClinic in the era of health reform.
Sussman, 45, was appointed president and chief operating officer of MinuteClinic in July, after stints as chief operating officer of UMass Memorial Medical Center and chief medical officer of Brigham and Women's Physician Organization in Boston.
MinuteClinic, which started in the Twin Cities 10 years ago as QuickMedx, is now part of Woonsocket, R.I.-based CVS Caremark Corp. It has 570 clinics around the country.
Q Your new chronic disease monitoring program appears a departure from the original MinuteClinic model with its limited menu, no appointments and not much continuity of care.
A MinuteClinic has been successful on three principles: quality, good access to care -- we're open seven days a week and you can walk in with no appointment -- and affordable prices.
Our health monitoring services are for patients diagnosed with diabetes, high cholesterol, asthma and high blood pressure. We provide care and lab tests, give patients the tests immediately and collaborate with the patient's medical homes. It's the same principles: high quality care, great access, reasonable prices.