Sarah Jane Tribble/KFF Health News
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. — On a hot July morning, customers at the Dollar General along a two-lane highway northwest of Nashville didn’t seem to notice signs of the chain store’s foray into mobile health care.
A woman lifted a child from the back of an SUV and walked into the store. A dog barked from a black pickup truck before its owner returned with cases of soda. Another woman checked her hair in a convertible’s rearview mirror before shopping.
Without a passing glance , each went right by a sign exclaiming “Quick, Easy Health Visits,” with an image of a mobile clinic.
Just after 10 a.m., registered nurse Kimberly French arrived to work at the DocGo mobile clinic parked in the store’s lot. She checked her schedule.
“We don’t have any appointments so far today, but that could change,” French says. “Last night we didn’t have any appointments and three or four people showed up all at one time.”
Dollar General, the nation’s largest retailer by number of stores, with more than 19,000 locations, partnered with a New York-based mobile medical services company called DocGo to test whether it could draw more customers and tackle persistent health inequities.
Deploying mobile clinics to fill care gaps in underserved areas isn’t a new idea. But pairing them with Dollar General’s ubiquitous small-town presence has been heralded by investment analysts and some rural health experts as a way to ease the rural health care drought.
Where doctors are scarce
Dollar General’s latest annual report notes that about 80% of the company’s stores are in towns with populations of fewer than 20,000 — precisely where medical professionals are scarce.
Sarah Jane Tribble/KFF Health News
Catering to those who want urgent or primary care, the mobile clinics take private insurance as well as Medicaid and Medicare. The company’s website says DocGo’s self-pay rates start at $69 for patients without insurance or who are out of network. DocGo officials said Tennessee patients may be charged different rates but declined to provide details.
On the ground in Tennessee, primary care doctors and patients are skeptical.
“Honestly, they don’t really grasp, I don’t think, what they’re getting into,” says Brent Staton, a family medicine doctor and the leader of the Cumberland Center for Healthcare Innovation, a statewide organization that helps small-town family care doctors coordinate care and negotiate with insurers, including Medicare.
Michelle Green manages the popular Sweet Charlotte grill about 10 miles south of Dollar General’s most rural test site. Green, who was handing out hamburgers and hand-cut fries during a Saturday rush, said she hadn’t heard of the mobile clinic. She said with a shrug that Dollar General and health care clinics “don’t go together.”
“I wouldn’t want to go to a health care clinic in a parking lot; that’s just me,” Green said, adding that someone might go if “you’re sick and you can’t go anywhere else.”
Bumps in the road
The Clarksville-area pilot, which launched last fall, is in a federally designated primary care shortage area for low-income residents.
About 1,000 patients have been seen in the company’s clinics, either at Dollar General sites or community pop-up events, and some became repeat visitors, according to DocGo. Payment is taken outside on a mobile device and, once inside, patients meet with an on-site staff member, like French, and connect via telehealth on an iPad screen with a physician assistant or nurse practitioner.
The clinic rotates between three Dollar General pilot sites each week. The stores are in the Clarksville area and, early this summer, the van stopped going to the most rural site, near Cumberland Furnace, because of low utilization, according to company leaders. DocGo moved that location’s time slot to busy Fort Campbell Boulevard in Clarksville.
“We do try for months in a given area to see where it makes sense and where it doesn’t,” former DocGo CEO Anthony Capone said in a July interview. “Our goal is to align the supply we have with the demand of the local community.”
Capone, though, said he thought the pilot would work in rural areas when insurers are signed on to refer their members to the mobile clinic. DocGo recently announced a deal with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Tennessee.
Capone abruptly resigned on Sept. 15 after the Albany Times Union reported he lied about having a graduate degree. In a document filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the company said Capone resigned “for personal reasons.
‘Democratize’ access to health care
Dollar General stores have a “tremendous opportunity” to have “a major impact on health there and really bond themselves as a member of the community,” says Tom Campanella, the healthcare executive-in-residence at Baldwin Wallace University, who has managed mobile clinics in rural places.
Near tiny Cumberland Furnace, south of Clarksville, William “Bubba” Murphy stops on his way into a Dollar General, pauses to wave and holler hello to friends getting out of their cars, and shares that multiple family members — his sister-in-law, nephew, and niece’s boyfriend — used and liked “the little clinic on wheels.”
“We don’t have to go to town and fight all that traffic,” he says. “They come to us. That’s a wonderful thing. It helps a lot of people.”
Over on busy Fort Campbell Boulevard in Clarksville, Marina Woolever, a mother of three, says she might use the clinic if she didn’t have insurance. Natural health professional Nichole Clemmer glanced toward the clinic and called it a “ploy” to make more money.
Sarah Jane Tribble/KFF Health News
Jefferies lead equity analyst Corey Tarlowe, who follows discount retailers, says the clinics will help “democratize” access to health care and simultaneously boost traffic to Dollar General stores.
With its rapid growth in recent years, Dollar General has faced accusations that its stores kill off local grocery stores and other businesses, reduce employment, and contribute to the creation of food deserts. More recently, the U.S. Labor Department said the chain “continues to discount safety” for employees as it has piled up more than $21 million in federal fines.
Crystal Luce, senior director of public relations for Dollar General, writes in a statement that the company believes each new store provides “positive economic benefits,” including new jobs, low-cost products, and its literacy foundation. On the federal fines, Luce writes Dollar General is “committed to providing a safe work environment for its associates and shopping experience for its customers.” The company declined to provide an interview.
The DocGo pilot, she writes, is intended to “complement” the DG Wellbeing initiative, which is a corporatewide push. Dollar General wants to increase “access to basic health care products and, ultimately, services over time, particularly in rural America,” Luce wrote.
Government contracts
States away, DocGo is under fire for a no-bid contract to provide housing, busing, and other services for asylum-seekers in New York. State Attorney General Letitia James is investigating complaints levied by migrants under the company’s care. In August, DocGo officials said claims aired by sources in a New York Times article that first reported the problems were “not reflective of the overall scope and quality” of the services the company has provided.
The company’s pilot with Dollar General is “supported with funding from the state of Tennessee,” DocGo’s Capone said during the company’s first-quarter earnings call. The Dollar General partnership is cited in quarterly grant reports DocGo’s Rapid Reliable Testing LLC submitted to the state, according to records KFF Health News obtained through public information requests.
In the grant filing, DocGo listed Dollar General along with other organizations as “trusted messengers” in building vaccine awareness.
Dollar General declined to respond to a question about its involvement in the grant. Instead, Luce writes “We continue to test and learn through the DocGo pilot.”
The goal of the $2.4 million grant, funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and distributed by the Tennessee Department of Health, is to administer covid-19 vaccines. In a written response provided by DocGo’s marketing director, Amanda Shell Jennings, the company said, “Dollar General has no involvement with the TN Department of Health grant funding or allocations.”
The grant covers storage and maintenance of covid-19 vaccines on the DocGo mobile clinics, Jennings’ statement said, adding that, as of September, DocGo has held 41 vaccine events and provided 66 vaccines to rural Tennesseans.
The right ‘connotation’?
Lulu West, 72, was visiting a friend at the Historic Cumberland Furnace Iron Museum when she stopped to consider the mobile clinic. West says she would rather go to her primary care doctor.
“When you say mobile clinic outside a Dollar General it just kind of has a connotation that you may not be comfortable with. You know what I mean?” she says.
That kind of response doesn’t surprise Carlo Pike, a doctor who for years has practiced family medicine in Clarksville. He says he’s not worried about the competition because providing primary care is about developing relationships.
“If I can do this relationship right,” Pike says, “maybe we can keep you from getting a [blood] sugar of 500 [mg/dL] or from Grandpa climbing up a ladder and trying to fix something he has no business with and falling off and breaking his leg.”
Staton says the Cumberland Center for Healthcare Innovation, his accountable care organization, has saved Medicare and Medicare Advantage companies more than $100 million by focusing on preventive care and reducing hospitalizations and emergency visits for patients.
“We’re just small rural primary care docs doing our jobs with a process that works,” Staton says. In another interview, Staton calls it “relational care.”
DocGo surveyed its patients and found that 19% of them did not have a primary care physician or hadn’t seen theirs in more than a year. In the written responses Jennings provided, DocGo said it follows up with every patient after the initial visit, offers telemedicine support between visits, and provides ongoing preventive care on a regular schedule.
‘Get her to the hospital’
Lottie Stokes, the president of the community center in Cumberland Furnace, says DocGo’s team had “called and asked to come down here.” Stokes says she would rather use the local emergency medical technicians and firefighters, who she says are “legit.”
Sarah Jane Tribble/KFF Health News
Her father-in-law, Bobby Stokes, who’s nearly 80 years old, says he used the mobile clinic before it moved locations.
His wife couldn’t breathe. They pulled into the parking lot and climbed onto the van.
“We wasn’t in there five minutes,” he says. “They done the blood pressure test and what they need to do and put her in the car and said, ‘Get her to the hospital, to the emergency room.'”
The DocGo staff, he says, did not ask for payment: “Nothing.”
“They were more concerned with her than they were with I guess getting their money,” he says, adding that his wife is doing well now. “They told me to get there, and I took them at their word. My car runs fast.”
Despite its outreach, DocGo struggled to get a foothold in rural Cumberland Furnace. The mobile clinic no longer parks at the Dollar General location where Bobby Stokes’ wife was treated.
KFF Health News correspondent Brett Kelman contributed to this report.
KFF Health News, formerly known as Kaiser Health News (KHN), is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.
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