Monarch Medicine Urgent Care: Trusted Same-Day Care in Carmel, INIU Urgent Care


Independent Urgent Care vs. Health System Urgent Care — What’s Actually Different?
Why Hamilton County patients are choosing Monarch Medicine over large network urgent care options.
If you’ve searched for urgent care in Carmel or Hamilton County, you’ve seen the same results: several health system-affiliated walk-in clinics alongside a few independent options. On the surface they look similar — same-day walk-in care, similar services, roughly comparable locations. But there are structural differences between independent urgent care and hospital system urgent care that directly affect your wait time, your bill, and the consistency of your care.
I founded Monarch Medicine specifically as an independent practice — not affiliated with any hospital system — because I believe independent clinics deliver a different quality of patient experience. This post explains exactly what those differences are, why they matter, and how to evaluate your options before you walk in.
About Monarch Medicine Urgent Care’s Patient-Centered Approach
The distinction isn’t about clinical quality in isolation — health system physicians are skilled providers. The differences are structural: how the clinic operates, how it bills, who staffs it on a given day, and how much the organization’s broader priorities shape the individual patient visit.
- Staffed by rotating providers — physician, PA, or NP varies by shift and availability
- May bill as hospital outpatient department, adding a facility fee to your visit cost
- Integrated into a large EMR network — referrals within system are seamless, but outside the network can be complicated
- Wait times vary by location; high-volume sites can approach ER-level delays during peak hours
- Pricing structure tied to hospital billing codes — less transparent for uninsured or high-deductible patients
- Provider relationship is transactional — different clinician each visit
- Dr. Clay, MD, FAAFP personally evaluates every patient on every visit — not a rotating provider schedule
- Independent clinic billing — no hospital facility fees on top of your visit cost
- Insurance-agnostic referrals — Dr. Clay refers to the best specialist for your situation, not the closest one in a network
- Under 15-minute average wait — small patient volume, high provider-to-patient ratio
- Self-pay pricing published online — transparent before you walk in
- Same physician every visit — continuity of care and clinical history that accumulates over time
The Hospital Facility Fee Problem — What Patients Often Don’t Know
One of the least understood differences between independent urgent care and health system urgent care is how they bill your insurance. When a health system designates a clinic as a hospital outpatient department, your visit may generate two separate charges: a physician fee and a hospital facility fee. The facility fee applies because the visit occurred in a hospital-affiliated setting — regardless of how minor the visit was.
What to Watch For
Why your “urgent care” bill might look like a hospital bill
If the urgent care clinic you visit is owned by or affiliated with a hospital system, check whether it is designated as a hospital outpatient department (HOPD). If it is, your insurance plan may apply your hospital cost-sharing — which typically includes a separate facility fee — rather than your urgent care copay. The clinical visit may be identical to an independent urgent care visit, but your out-of-pocket cost can be significantly higher.
Monarch Medicine is an independent clinic and does not charge hospital facility fees. Our pricing is published online — what you see is what you pay.
What Independent Ownership Means for Your Care
Physician-owned practices operate differently than corporate urgent care chains or hospital system walk-in clinics. The financial incentives are aligned differently — the physician’s income depends directly on patient outcomes and reputation, not on visit volume targets or system-wide throughput metrics. Here’s what that looks like in practice at Monarch Medicine:
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No visit-volume pressure Dr. Clay doesn’t have a system target for patients-per-hour. Your visit takes as long as your evaluation requires — not as long as a staffing model allows.
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Referrals based on clinical judgment, not network loyalty When you need a specialist, Dr. Clay refers you to the right provider for your situation — not the closest one inside a particular hospital system.
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Continuity that builds over time When you bring your child in for an ear infection and return six months later with recurring symptoms, that history matters to the evaluation. A rotating provider system starts from zero every visit.
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Family medicine breadth, not urgent care-only scope Dr. Clay’s board certification covers the full age spectrum and the full range of family medicine — pediatric, adult, and women’s health conditions treated with the same standard of care.
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Direct access to the physician You call (317) 804-4203 and speak with someone who can answer clinical questions, help you decide whether to come in, and give you guidance before you make the drive.
“I almost hate to leave a review because I love never having to wait! But I am so happy to have found this gem! Excellent service and care — everyone is friendly unlike so many other medical offices.” Monarch Medicine Patient, Google Review
When a Health System Urgent Care Makes Sense
Being direct about this: health system urgent care networks have real advantages in specific situations. If your primary care physician is within the same health system, your records transfer automatically and follow-up is seamless. If you have a condition that’s likely to require specialist referral within that system — imaging at a connected radiology center, an orthopedic follow-up — the integrated network simplifies the path.
If you don’t have a primary care relationship within a particular health system, or if your primary concern is wait time, pricing transparency, or consistent access to a physician rather than a rotating provider, an independent urgent care clinic like Monarch Medicine is typically the better fit. The clinical care for a UTI, a sprained ankle, or a flu evaluation is identical — the difference is operational, and for many patients it’s meaningful.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between independent urgent care and health system urgent care?
Is Monarch Medicine affiliated with IU Health or any hospital system?
Will I be billed a hospital facility fee at Monarch Medicine?
Does Monarch Medicine accept the same insurance as health system urgent care?
How far is Monarch Medicine from IU Health facilities in Carmel?
Monarch Medicine Urgent Care — Carmel, IN
Walk-ins always welcome — no appointment needed
Have questions before your visit? Contact us and we’ll help you decide whether Monarch Medicine is the right fit for your situation.
Last medically reviewed by Dr. Lisa Clay, MD, FAAFP on February 19, 2026
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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