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Primary Care Is in Trouble. So Doctors Band Together To Boost Their Market Power.
Western Massachusetts, a patchwork of rural communities and low-income cities, is a difficult place to find a primary care doctor if you don’t already have one. Frustrated patients often turn to online forums, asking for leads or advice on how to find a practice that is accepting new patients.
One name repeatedly crops up in these discussions: Valley Medical Group.
With four locations in the Connecticut River Valley, the practice has been a mainstay of family medicine since the 1990s. Valley Medical’s flagship office in Florence can be found right on Main Street, next door to a pizza restaurant and near a Friendly’s.
Valley has 90 medical providers — including doctors, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants — and on-site labs, X-rays, and vision care. With tens of thousands of patients, it’s become one of the largest independent practices in western Massachusetts.
It forms a key part of the region’s health care infrastructure, yet Valley Medical has rarely been under more strain than it is now. In January, the practice laid off 40 employees — 10% of its 400-person staff — mostly in support positions.
Despite patient demand — there are waiting lists to be seen — primary care providers take on more clinical responsibilities, and for less pay, than most medical specialists, said the group’s CEO, primary care physician Paul Carlan. Rates are outlined in the group’s contracts with insurance providers.
“It has to do with the fact that our contracts don’t pay as well as we think they should,” Carlan said. “The cost of everything is going up.”
Valley Medical Group is far from alone in this predicament. Thousands of primary care practices, a key gateway to the medical system, are fighting to remain financially viable — and independent.
In response, many are banding together to form Independent Physician Associations, or IPAs. The goal is to increase their market power, change the way they get paid, and retain control over how they treat patients.
Threats to Physician Autonomy
Primary care practices in the U.S. are in serious trouble, according to workforce surveys. The American Association of Medical Colleges estimates a deficit of up to 86,000 primary care doctors by 2036, as more primary care doctors retire and fewer enter the field.
The number of people who can’t find a primary care doctor has grown by 20% in the past decade, according to a recent JAMA Internal Medicine report.
Lower relative salaries and higher professional stress are disincentives when medical students consider a career in primary care. Newly minted doctors can earn more in specialties such as cardiology or surgery.
Financial stresses in U.S. health care, exacerbated by the covid pandemic, have led to the closure of many primary care practices, according to the AAMC.
The Massachusetts Health Policy Commission released a report in 2025 partly blaming the crisis on the relatively low insurance reimbursement rates for primary care. The revenue problem for primary care is projected to get worse when the Republican-backed cuts to Medicaid start to take effect later this year.
As they seek financial security, many primary care practices have merged with large hospital systems, with doctors becoming employees of those systems.
But the doctors at Valley Medical Group were determined to avoid that fate. Joining a health system takes away the autonomy doctors need to make the best clinical decisions for their patients, Carlan said. It also siphons off income into the larger hospital system.
“Our priorities get muddled up,” he said. “And I think when you’re part of a health system, you’re constantly being asked to bend for the needs of the organization. Hospitals get paid when their beds are full.”
By contrast, primary care providers need time and money to manage or prevent illness, Carlan said, and their insurance reimbursement rates should take that into account.
In December, Valley Medical Group announced it would be joining an Independent Physician Association. Like a union, an IPA combines individual primary care offices, giving them power in numbers when negotiating contracts with Medicaid, Medicare, and private insurance companies.
“It’s a moment of transition,” said Lisa Bielamowicz, chief clinical officer of TrustWorks Collective, an independent health care consultancy that works with health systems and physician groups.
IPAs are gaining momentum as older doctors retire, especially following the challenging years of the covid pandemic, Bielamowicz said. “As the baby boomers move out and younger physicians take leadership roles, these kinds of models become more attractive.”
The American Academy of Family Physicians, a trade group, is hearing from practice owners who joined hospital systems but now want to break off and return to being a smaller practice.
“So if independent IPAs can create the infrastructure support to make independent practice viable, then that’s a good thing,” said Karen Johnson, a vice president at AAFP.
IPAs can bring more clout to the table when negotiating rates with insurance companies. Some insurers say they like working with these partnerships because they help stabilize primary care practices, maintaining access and options for insured patients.
Otherwise, some doctors shift their business model to “direct primary care,” which bypasses insurance altogether.
“We’re looking at independent practices that aren’t buoyed by …. these large health systems and can support members in the community in the ways that they want to be supported,” said Lisa Glenn, a vice president with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts.
A Different Payment Model
When those independent practices band together, Glenn said, Blue Cross can offer “value-based” contracts. Instead of getting a payment for each visit or procedure, the medical practice is given a budgeted amount for each patient’s care, which provides an incentive to keep them healthy so they need fewer treatments.
Medical providers “make different kinds of choices than they would if they’re paid for every procedure, every visit, every widget,” TrustWorks’ Bielamowicz said.
If there is money left at the end of the year, it’s split between the practice and the insurer.
The catch, Glenn said, is that a value-based contract works only if there’s a big enough pool of patients to spread out the risk, in case a few get really sick. Otherwise, she said, “the risk of ending up above or below the budget becomes somewhat subject to random variation rather than performance.”
Value-based contracts were supposed to be the next big thing when the Affordable Care Act passed in 2010, an innovative way to bring costs down for the health system as a whole.
But they were slow to catch on; the traditional fee-for-service payment model was too entrenched. Experts say that could still change, if enough primary care providers work together to build market power through IPAs.
“If we keep people out of the ER, keep them out of unnecessary hospitalizations, we save money for the system,” said Chris Kryder, CEO of Arches Medical IPA in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the IPA specializing in value-based contracts that Valley Medical joined. “And we create more income for the PCPs [primary care providers], which is dreadfully needed.”
These contracts also allow more flexibility in staffing, Kryder said, because nurses, physical therapists, and medical assistants can take on some of the less complex medical tasks, saving the practice money.
IPAs Can Help, Depending on Who’s in Charge
But IPAs are not a panacea for primary care’s problems, according to some health care leaders.
There are hundreds of IPAs, but not all offer the independence and autonomy that many doctors crave. Some IPAs are actually owned by hospital systems, or even private equity companies, and they’re less focused on preventive care.
The American Academy of Family Physicians advises its members to seek out IPAs with “integrity,” ones that give doctors a strong role in decision-making.
“Who’s calling the shots, who’s making the decisions, and is it really focused on the best interests and long-term benefit of physicians in practice and their patients?” asked AAFP’s Johnson.
Arches Medical is owned entirely by physicians and focused specifically on primary care, Kryder said. But to be more effective, Arches needs to recruit more practices that want value-based contracts.
That can be a hard sell, said Glenn, of Blue Cross. Under that payment model, doctors might see a lag of more than a year from the time they provide care to the moment they realize savings.
“It doesn’t happen overnight, and it does take an investment,” she said.
That lag is one reason Valley Medical Group had to lay off staff after joining the Arches IPA, said CEO Carlan. But he has faith that, after some time, the practice will become more financially stable, be able to offer higher salaries, and, most important, keep the doctors in charge.
This article is from a partnership with New England Public Media and NPR.
KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.
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Banks Are Becoming Bulwarks Against Scams for Vulnerable Seniors
The first call came just before Thanksgiving last year. She didn’t recognize the phone number, but she answered anyway.
“The person said he was an officer of the Department of Criminal Investigations looking into drug trafficking and money laundering,” the woman recalled. He seemed to know a lot about her: the states where she and her late husband had lived; his name and occupation; and her current address in Washington County, Rhode Island.
On her phone, he showed her a convincing badge and a photo ID with his name (“‘Frank’ something”), plus an article describing the supposed investigation. The woman, a 76-year-old retiree, denied any involvement.
“You can hire a very expensive criminal defense attorney, or you can cooperate with me,” Frank told her.
“Now, when you think about it, it doesn’t make any sense,” the woman acknowledged recently. But persuaded by the badge and ID, she agreed to cooperate. Otherwise, “I thought they were going to come and arrest me.”
Frank called each morning to learn where she was going, what she was doing. His team would be watching, he warned. The woman, feeling “petrified,” started looking around as she drove to garden club meetings. Was somebody following her?
It was all a scam.
Because victims’ sense of shame often leaves them reluctant to report such crimes, the extent of elder financial exploitation is hard to calculate. The Federal Trade Commission reported losses of $2.4 billion in 2024, largely driven by investment and romance scams and impersonations, with total losses much higher.
Americans age 60 and older lose more than $28 billion annually to financial exploitation, AARP estimated in 2023.
As those numbers rise, because the population is aging and predators are growing increasingly resourceful, banks and investment firms are becoming the first line of defense.
Frank’s initial target: her account at Fidelity Investments. He instructed her to shift about $250,000 into her checking account, telling the financial adviser at her local office that she and her family intended to buy real estate.
That scheme fizzled when the adviser said Fidelity could not approve the transaction without more information on the property.
So Frank sent her to her local branch of Washington Trust Company to take $70,000 in cash from a home-equity line of credit. “We don’t give out that much in cash,” the teller said, quietly messaging the branch manager, who had known the woman and her husband for years.
The manager ushered the woman into her office to talk, and the scam stopped there, with a call to the local police. The woman’s assets remained intact, but the experience proved so mortifying that she has not told even her family how close she came to losing much of her life savings. The New York Times is withholding her name to spare her embarrassment.
“I felt so stupid,” she said. “I felt like a fool.”
Financial predators targeting older adults represent “a heightened focus for us now,” said Mary Noons, president and chief operating officer of Washington Trust.
A regional community bank, Washington Trust cranked up its efforts last fall to advise older customers and their families about finances, including the dangers of elder fraud and exploitation. It published and distributed a booklet called “Age With Wisdom” and brought in an expert on dementia to speak with staff members.
And it became one of the 1,500 financial institutions to date to use BankSafe, a free AARP video program that trains front-line employees to spot the red flags indicating possible elder exploitation and to intervene. Everyone at the branch where the 76-year-old banked had taken the training.
“Some older customers visit their bank far more frequently than they see their health care providers,” Noons pointed out.
Until recent years, financial institutions placed “more of an emphasis on the autonomy of the client,” said Pamela Teaster, director of the Virginia Tech Center for Gerontology and an elder abuse researcher. Their approach was, “an adult has the capacity to make poor choices, and we’re going to let them make them,” she added.
But changes in government and industry policies and practices have encouraged greater vigilance. Congress passed the Senior Safe Act in 2018, protecting banks and financial firms from liability if they reported suspected exploitation to authorities.
That year, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority began requiring member firms to ask for a trusted contact person when investors open or update accounts. (The account holder isn’t obliged to provide one, however.) And since 2022, it has allowed firms to place holds on older investors’ transactions if they suspect exploitation is involved.
About half of states have enacted laws that permit financial institutions to deny suspicious transactions or impose holds for specified periods to allow investigations, said Jilenne Gunther, the director of BankSafe.
“It adds friction,” she explained. “With space and time, the criminal gets worried and might move on. And the potential mark has time to stop and think.”
Teaster’s analysis of data from BankSafe, during a six-month pilot in 82 financial institutions, found that participants were much more likely to report suspected cases and save customers money than a control group was.
Not all of older adults’ losses result from predators, however. They can, on their own, get caught up in investment fads, take on too much debt, or make otherwise unwise decisions, even without criminals pulling the strings or relatives looting their accounts.
Managing finances presents complex cognitive challenges, said Mark Lachs, co-chief of geriatrics and palliative medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine. “It requires a lot of brain,” he said, including: “Memory, remembering that a bill is due. Executive function, the ability to manage your time. Abstraction, hypothesizing about your future.”
He added, “Financial errors are not infrequently the first sign of impending dementia or a neurocognitive disorder.”
A 2024 study by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, for instance, found an increased probability of delinquent payments and deteriorating credit ratings in the five years before a dementia diagnosis. Those errors can reduce seniors’ access to credit and raise their interest rates on loans at the very point when caregiving expenses are likely to soar.
Lachs has called on fellow doctors to recognize what he calls Age-Associated Financial Vulnerability, a syndrome that can affect even older people with normal cognition, especially if they contend with medical illnesses, sensory deficits, or social isolation.
And he remains skeptical about the financial industry’s claims of heightened attention to its oldest customers. “I still see concerning financial transactions executed that should have received far greater scrutiny,” he said.
Training more front-line staff members and increasing emphasis on establishing trusted contacts for older customers would help, Gunther said, because “once the money leaves the account, it’s near impossible to ever retrieve it.” More states could enact laws allowing financial institutions to deny suspicious transactions or impose holds.
Several related bills with bipartisan support are working their way through Congress. The National Strategy for Combating Scams Act would require the FBI to coordinate efforts to protect seniors. A bill that restores an IRS deduction would at least provide the consolation of excusing scam victims from paying taxes on money they no longer have.
However, new weapons like artificial-intelligence voice cloning — in which the supposed grandson four states away who urgently needs $5,000 in gift cards actually sounds like the victim’s grandson — keep advocates and bankers awake at night.
In the Washington Trust branch where the Rhode Island woman didn’t lose her money, employees just days earlier had stopped a scam similar to the one that had targeted her.
But more recently, nobody spotted any danger signs when an older woman withdrew $9,000 for a kitchen renovation, until it went to a scammer instead of a contractor.
The New Old Age is produced through a partnership with The New York Times.
KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.
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