Click to Listen to PodCast » On a recent trip to Miami, FL. I had the opportunity to tour the OrthoNow Flagship franchise. I was not only blown away by the business model, but the staff and the founder himself Dr Alejandro Badia, all were huge proponents of smart medicine. Why do we call… Read More »
News & Events
Fixer-Uppers New franchises offer prescriptions for what’s ailing healthcare
BY JEFFREY MCKINNEY With demand for services up and job satisfaction for providers down, medical franchises are taking off. But beware, one expert says, because ‘franchising in healthcare is not for sissies.’ Walk-in patients with ankle sprains, wrist fractures, concussions and other injuries will soon get instant relief, if OrthoNow realizes its plan to sell… Read More »
Franchising Orthopedics-on-Demand
Dr. Alejandro Badia, CEO and Chief Medical Officer at OrthoNOW™ Doral, South Florida's only Orthopaedic Urgent Care Center, is named as one of the Top 100 Under 50 Diverse Executive Leaders by Diversity MBA Magazine
Fort Lauderdale, Fl., July 22, 2014 Diversity MBA Magazine, an internationally distributed publication, announced the names of the Top 100 under 50 Diverse Executive and Emerging Leaders for 2014. This year was the most competitive yet and Chief Medical Officer at OrthoNOW™ Doral, Dr. Alejandro Badia, was among the leaders chosen. Dr. Badia was selected… Read More »
Outpatient Facilities in High Demand as ObamaCare Takes Shape
Many Americans believe that the health care industry will benefit from President Obama’s health care legislation known as the Affordable Care Act. Growth in the area of outpatient medical centers was something that was already expected as the immense baby boomer generation ages. However, the prospect of extending health insurance to an estimated 30 million… Read More »
Hospital operators and Obamacare Prescription for change
America’s hospital industry prepares for upheavalAMERICA’S hospitals are the most expensive part of the world‘s most ex— pensive health system. They accounted for $851 billion, or 31%, of American health spending in 2011. If they were a country, they would be the world’s 16th-1argest economy. And they are in the midst of dramatic change, much… Read More »
As Hospital Prices Soar, a Stitch Tops $500
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL DECEMBER 2, 2013SAN FRANCISCO — With blood oozing from deep lacerations, the two patients arrived at California Pacific Medical Center’s tidy emergency room. Deepika Singh, 26, had gashed her knee at a backyard barbecue. Orla Roche, a rambunctious toddler on vacation with her family, had tumbled from a couch, splitting open her… Read More »
Race Is On to Profit From Rise of Urgent Care
NORWALK, Conn. — Start in Room 4, just beyond the reception area: A man is having blood drained from a bruised finger. Over in Room 1, a woman is being treated for eye trouble. Next door, in Room 2, a boy is having his throat swabbed. For more than eight hours a day, seven days… Read More »
Drive-Thru Health Care: How McDonald's Inspired An Urgent Care Gold Rush
This story appears in the July 21, 2014 issue of Forbes. The path to owning your own medical practice typically runs through more than a decade of schooling, grinding through medical school, residency and years of specialty training. Unless you’re Rick Crews. “I knew next to nothing about health care,” says the proud owner of… Read More »
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