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There's a Right and Wrong Way to Use Urgent Care

Mid adult nurse helps a senior man fill out a medical form as he waits to be seen by a doctor.
Mid adult nurse helps a senior man fill out a medical form as he waits to be seen by a doctor. Getty Images

Urgent care has become one of the fast-growing sectors of the U.S. healthcare system.

In 2024, there were over 15,000 of these clinics, up from 7,000 in 2014, according to the Urgent Care Association. And about a quarter of Americans now turn to urgent care every year.

This rise has been partly driven by the decline of primary care, said Dr. Ateev Mehrotra, a health policy expert at the Brown University School of Public Health. Patients who have struggled to find a regular provider and be seen quickly are turning toward faster, more convenient alternatives, he said.

Unlike primary care offices, urgent care clinics are set up for walk-in visits and often have evening, weekend and holiday hours. They're also typically cheaper and faster than a hospital emergency department.

Many people, however, don't know what exactly an urgent care center is meant to handle or when going there could delay or compromise the care they need. We asked experts what patients should know.

What does urgent care handle well?

Urgent care clinics are designed to handle sudden illnesses and injuries that aren't life-threatening, said Dr. Leslie Miller, medical director of urgent care services at NYU Langone Health. These can include colds and other respiratory infections, sprains and strains, cuts and rashes, digestive issues and urinary tract infections.

To manage those problems, urgent care clinicians can order X-rays, basic bloodwork and other tests for common conditions. They might also carry some basic medications and do minor procedures, like splinting or sewing up a wound, said Dr. Howard Willson, a Washington-based emergency medicine doctor who works in urgent care.

Most of these clinicians are nurse practitioners and physician assistants; only about 15% of urgent care providers are doctors.

Because most urgent care centers don't have advanced imaging or operating rooms, they are not able to handle heart attacks, strokes, appendicitis, massive bleeding and the like. So, if your symptoms are severe or unusual, go straight to the ER.

Older adults and anyone with a complex medical history should be even more cautious about relying on urgent care and err more toward primary care or the ER, said Dr. Douglas Rappaport, an emergency medicine physician at the Mayo Clinic in Phoenix.

When should you avoid it?

Like emergency departments, urgent care centers are best suited to deal with unexpected problems. But some have expanded into more routine services, such as school or employment physicals. And many wind up treating a lot of patients with chronic diseases, serving as a sort of bridge to other care, said Dr. Cassandra Barnette Donnelly, president of the Urgent Care Association. For example, a patient might run out of blood pressure medication over the weekend, she said, or have a flare-up of a long-standing condition that warrants treatment before an appointment is available.

Occasional use is perfectly fine, but urgent care clinicians aren't equipped to manage long-standing symptoms or conditions, Rappaport said.

After all, these clinicians usually don't have access to your medical records and are meeting you for the first (and potentially last) time, said Dr. Sarah Nosal, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians. So no matter how well you try to fill them in, they won't have the full picture. That increases the risk of missed or incorrect diagnoses, since urgent care clinicians might treat your symptoms in isolation, not recognizing that they're part of a larger pattern, Nosal added. It can also make inappropriate prescriptions more likely.

These trade-offs may be acceptable for relatively healthy people, Mehrotra said. But primary care offers a more reliable backstop -- monitoring trends in your health, keeping preventive care up to date and adjusting treatment plans.

Many primary care practices set aside slots for same-day urgent visits, so before turning to urgent care for anything, it's worth calling your provider's office first.

How do you choose a good urgent care clinic?

Urgent care centers are built around speed and convenience, Mehrotra said, so their quality can vary widely. Research published last year found that the clinics inappropriately prescribe antibiotics, opioids and steroid medications at high rates. A 2022 study at the Mayo Clinic in Phoenix also found that nearly two-thirds of patients who were referred from an urgent care clinic to the ER seemed to have been misdiagnosed in urgent care.

So it's worth researching urgent care sites near your home and workplace before you need one. Call around and compare your options, Willson said. Are they in network with your insurance plan? Do they have X-ray, lab testing and IV fluid services on-site? Can they refer you to specialists if needed?

Ideally, try to find a clinic affiliated with the health system you use so that the provider can see your medical records, Nosal said. You can even ask your primary care provider for a recommendation, she added.

If you end up at a clinic outside your health system, get your records and an after-visit summary before you leave, rather than assuming those items will show up in a portal later, Nosal said. Then share that information with your primary care provider. That way if the problem persists, your doctor can build on the urgent care visit rather than starting over.

"Urgent care isn't bad medicine; it's episodic medicine," Willson said. "Nobody's watching the long arc of your health."

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Copyright 2026 The New York Times Company

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