Convenience Clinics: Characteristics of Persons Using Walk-in Retail Health Clinics and Urgent Care Centers and the Impact on Preventive Care and Screening Services
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Abstract
Convenience clinics, including walk-in retail health clinics and urgent care centers, offer care during extended office hours for a limited scope of time-limited acute conditions. Although utilization patterns of these clinics vary, they are
increasingly used by some people as a source of regular care. This dissertation describes the factors associated with
convenience clinic use for usual care, examines changing patterns in convenience clinic use for usual care following the
peak of the COVID-19 pandemic, and analyzes the relationship between the use of convenience clinics for usual care and
receipt of some recommended preventive care and screening services. This analysis uses 2019, 2022, and 2023 data from
the National Health Interview Survey and regression modeling techniques to explore each of these aims. We found that
among people with a place of usual care, people who were younger and uninsured were more likely to report convenience
clinics as a usual source of care. Among people with a place of usual care and who have seen a healthcare provider in the
last year, people who report convenience clinics as a usual source of care had a significantly lower likelihood of receiving
some preventive care services compared to people reporting usual care at a doctor’s office or health center. This research
provides insight for healthcare providers on the changing demand for convenience clinics in the ambulatory landscape and
fills an important gap in the extant literature.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2025
