The urgent care market experienced two opposing forces during the pandemic: Health care companies mothballed growth plans even as more patients sought care from these walk-in medical centers.
In the midst of it all, Minnetonka-based UnitedHealth Group significantly scaled back its MedExpress urgent care operations in Minnesota and across the country.
But now, the go-go urgent care market seems poised for a comeback with plans for new facilities resurrected to meet demand from patients who recently discovered they like the convenience.
In August, a franchisee with Alabama-based American Family Care opened a clinic in Hopkins — the company's first urgent care location in Minnesota — and plans to open a second center soon. Compcare Occupational Medicine & Urgent Care, a Minnesota company, added locations this summer in Cottage Grove and Eagan. And in May, Duluth-based Essentia Health opened a new center in Cloquet.
Centers were too busy with patients during COVID-19 surges — and too constrained by staffing shortages and supply chain problems — to open many more facilities during the pandemic, said Lou Ellen Horwitz, chief executive of the Urgent Care Association.
There are just more than 11,000 free-standing urgent care centers across the country, the trade group says, up 20% year-to-date. A more typical annual growth rate is about 11%, Horwitz said, adding that the number of centers across the U.S. basically held steady during 2020 and 2021.
Operators are optimistic, she said, because many patients turned to urgent care for the first time during the COVID-19 health crisis and are now coming back for more.
"Urgent care did very well through the pandemic because we were open," Horwitz said. "Growth in terms of new centers pretty much stopped on a large scale, mostly because there was so much scrambling to manage the pandemic that there was not a lot of bandwidth for building clinics. But now, we're catching up."