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Immediate Healthcare

What Is Immediate Healthcare? When to Use It & Why It Matters | Monarch Medicine

What Is Immediate Healthcare — And When Should You Use It?

A physician’s guide to the gap between the ER and waiting for an appointment.

One of the most common things I hear from patients is some version of: “I wasn’t sure if this was serious enough for the ER, and I couldn’t get into my regular doctor for four days — so I just waited.” In nearly two decades of clinical practice, I’ve seen how that waiting plays out. Conditions that were minor on day one become significantly harder to treat by day four.

That gap — between a life-threatening emergency and a condition that can safely wait a week — is exactly what immediate healthcare exists to fill. This post explains what it means clinically, when it’s the right call, what delays actually cost you, and what a visit at Monarch Medicine looks like from check-in to discharge.

The Three Tiers of Acute Medical Care

Most acute conditions fall into one of three tiers. Understanding where immediate healthcare sits helps patients make faster, better decisions when something comes up:

Tier 1

Emergency Room

  • Life-threatening conditions
  • Chest pain, stroke symptoms
  • Severe trauma, major bleeding
  • Loss of consciousness
  • Avg. wait: 2–4+ hours
  • Avg. cost: $1,500–$3,000+

Tier 2 — Best Fit for Most Urgent Conditions

Immediate Healthcare

  • Urgent, not life-threatening
  • Flu, infections, minor injuries
  • Same-day evaluation needed
  • On-site diagnostics available
  • Avg. wait: under 15 min
  • Avg. cost: $100–$300

Tier 3

Primary Care

  • Chronic & preventive care
  • Wellness exams, follow-ups
  • Non-urgent medication mgmt
  • Typically scheduled days out
  • Avg. wait: 3–7+ days
  • Cost: varies by plan

According to the CDC, a large share of emergency department visits involve conditions that could be treated safely at an immediate care facility — at a fraction of the wait and cost. The problem is that patients often don’t recognize immediate care as a legitimate option, or they assume the quality won’t be there. At Monarch Medicine, Dr. Lisa Clay, MD, FAAFP personally evaluates every patient on every visit. That’s not the standard across the industry — it’s ours.

The Real Cost of Waiting: What Delayed Care Actually Does

“I waited to see if it would get better” is one of the most common things I hear from patients who arrive with a condition that’s now significantly worse than it was two days ago. The clinical and financial consequences of delayed immediate care are real and frequently underestimated:

UTI → Kidney Infection An uncomplicated UTI treated same-day requires a short antibiotic course. Left untreated 3–5 days, it can ascend to the kidneys — requiring IV antibiotics, longer treatment, and sometimes hospitalization.
Strep → Rheumatic Fever Untreated strep pharyngitis can lead to rheumatic fever, an inflammatory condition affecting the heart and joints. The CDC recommends prompt antibiotic treatment to prevent this complication.
Sprain Hiding a Fracture Without imaging, a hairline fracture is clinically indistinguishable from a sprain. Weight-bearing on an undiagnosed break can displace it — turning a simple injury into one that may require surgical intervention.
Pediatric Ear Infection Otitis media left untreated in children can progress to mastoiditis or — rarely — spread intracranially. Young children who can’t describe worsening pain are particularly vulnerable to delayed diagnosis.

The financial cost compounds the clinical cost. Treating a kidney infection costs significantly more than treating a UTI. Treating a complication always costs more than treating the original condition. Immediate healthcare, used appropriately, is almost always the most cost-effective path.

ER vs. Immediate Care: The Cost Comparison

For non-life-threatening conditions, the cost difference between the ER and immediate care is substantial — and the clinical outcome is often identical or better at an immediate care center because of shorter wait times and faster treatment initiation.

Condition Typical ER Cost Immediate Care Cost
Strep throat (rapid test + antibiotics) $800 – $1,500 $100 – $150
UTI (urinalysis + antibiotics) $700 – $1,200 $100 – $150
Minor fracture (X-ray + splint) $1,500 – $3,000 $150 – $300
Laceration requiring stitches $1,000 – $2,500 $150 – $250
Flu (rapid test + antiviral) $600 – $1,200 $100 – $175

Monarch Medicine publishes transparent self-pay pricing so you know the cost before you arrive — no bill that shows up three weeks later for an amount you never agreed to.

What a Visit at Monarch Medicine Actually Looks Like

Immediate healthcare at Monarch Medicine isn’t a triage handoff to a mid-level provider. Here’s exactly what happens from the moment you walk in:

  1. Check in — walk-in or online

    Walk in directly or hold your spot via MyChart before you leave home. Average wait from check-in to being seen: under 15 minutes.

  2. Dr. Clay evaluates you directly

    No intermediate provider between you and the physician. Dr. Clay takes your history, reviews symptoms, and performs a physical exam — the same standard you’d expect from a specialist visit, same day, no appointment.

  3. On-site diagnostics if needed

    Rapid lab testing (strep, flu, COVID, urinalysis) and digital X-ray are available on-site. Results reviewed by Dr. Clay during your visit — you leave with answers, not a referral.

  4. Personalized treatment plan

    Prescriptions, wound care, splinting, IV hydration, or illness treatment — built around your specific case, not a generic protocol sheet.

  5. Clear discharge guidance

    Before you leave, Dr. Clay explains what to monitor, when to return if symptoms change, and whether follow-up is needed. You leave knowing what you have, what to do about it, and when to worry.

“My visit was quick and the staff were very friendly and informative. Will definitely make this my primary urgent care for the future.” Monarch Medicine Patient, Google Review

Frequently Asked Questions

What conditions are appropriate for immediate healthcare?
Immediate healthcare is appropriate for non-life-threatening conditions: flu, strep, ear infections, sinus infections, UTIs, minor fractures, lacerations, sprains, skin rashes, and pediatric sick visits. For chest pain, difficulty breathing, or signs of stroke — call 911 or go to the nearest ER.
How much does immediate healthcare cost compared to the ER?
An immediate care visit typically costs $100–$300 for common conditions. The equivalent ER visit typically costs $800–$3,000 or more for the same condition. Monarch Medicine publishes transparent self-pay pricing so you know before you arrive.
What happens if I delay immediate care?
Delaying care for conditions like UTIs, ear infections, or strep can allow infections to worsen significantly — sometimes requiring hospitalization for what started as a simple outpatient condition. A sprained ankle without imaging can hide a fracture that worsens with weight-bearing. Early evaluation almost always leads to better outcomes and lower total cost.
Is immediate healthcare the same as urgent care?
The terms are used interchangeably — both mean same-day walk-in care for non-life-threatening conditions. Quality varies significantly by facility. Monarch Medicine is physician-led on every visit, with a board-certified family physician personally evaluating each patient — not a rotating mid-level staffing model.
Can children receive immediate healthcare at Monarch Medicine?
Yes. Monarch Medicine treats infants, children, and teens through our pediatric urgent care — with age-appropriate evaluation, dosing, and treatment from a board-certified family physician. Dr. Clay’s family medicine training spans birth through adulthood.

Monarch Medicine Urgent Care — Carmel, IN

90 Executive Drive, Suite A & B, Carmel, IN 46032
Mon–Fri: 8:00am – 6:00pm  |  Sat–Sun: 9:00am – 12:00pm
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Walk-ins always welcome — no appointment needed

Have questions before your visit? Contact us and we’ll help you figure out the right next step.

Last medically reviewed by Dr. Lisa Clay, MD, FAAFP on February 19, 2026

Dr. Lisa Clay, MD, FAAFP

About the Author

Dr. Lisa Clay, MD, FAAFP

Board-Certified Family Physician

Dr. Lisa Clay is a board-certified family physician with nearly two decades of clinical experience. She founded Monarch Medicine Urgent Care in Carmel, Indiana to deliver compassionate, physician-led care with minimal wait times and transparent pricing.

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