A neighborhood practice where your doctor reads your bloodwork on Thursday knowing your family history from Monday — not from a chart.
Why choose a GP over urgent care or the ER?
Real data. Not checkmarks. Each row below is a reason to have a doctor who already knows you.
| Category | TriageOur Practice | Urgent Care | Emergency Room |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Wait TimeFrom arrival to seeing a provider | 12 minAvg. 2026 data | 47 minNational avg. | 4.5 hrsNational avg. |
| Cost Per VisitWith insurance copay | $35Standard copay | $165Avg. copay | $1,400+Avg. out-of-pocket |
| Continuity of CareSeeing the same provider each visit | 100%Always your doctor | 18%Same provider rate | 4%Same provider rate |
| Follow-Up RateStructured follow-up after visit | 94%Within 7 days | 31%Patients followed up | 12%Patients followed up |
| Same-Day Sick VisitsAvailability for acute illness today | Yes7 days / week | YesWalk-in only | YesFor emergencies |
| Knows Your HistoryProvider familiar with your medical background | Always22 yrs avg. tenure | RarelyChart review only | NeverNo prior context |
Sources: MGMA 2025 Practice Performance Report, CMS Hospital Compare, AHRQ National Statistics. Costs reflect national averages with standard insurance coverage.
Medicine practiced the way it used to be — and should still be.
When you become a patient here, you're not assigned a number in a queue. You're introduced to a doctor who will read your bloodwork on Thursday knowing what your cholesterol looked like three years ago, and why that matters now.
We see whole families — the parent who brought their teenager in for a sports physical, the retiree whose longtime GP retired, the young professional who still has their college doctor's voicemail saved. Everyone gets the same unhurried appointment.
Sick visits are same-day. Annual physicals are thorough. And the person who picks up the phone when you call will know your name before you give it.
Accepted Insurance Plans
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"I moved here in March not knowing a single doctor in the city. My old GP was four states away. I called Triage on a Tuesday with a sinus infection I'd been ignoring — they saw me that afternoon. By Thursday, Dr. Harmon already knew I was allergic to amoxicillin and that my mother has hypertension. That was eight months ago. I don't have my old doctor's number saved anymore."
Maya Chen, 31
Software engineer · Patient since March 2025