Category: Healthcare Management


  • What Happens When Private Equity Moves In

    Who Owns Your Doctor? Private Equity and Southern Oregon Healthcare, Part 2 of 4 In 2020 or 2021 — the exact date is not publicly disclosed — Oregon Medical Group, a physician-founded primary care practice in Lane County, was acquired by Optum, a subsidiary of UnitedHealth Group, the largest health insurance company in the United…

  • The Quiet Takeover

    Who Owns Your Doctor? Private Equity and Southern Oregon Healthcare, Part 1 of 4 There are five physical therapy clinics operating in Medford and Grants Pass right now that most people in this region have never heard of — not as clinics, but as investments. They operate under the name BenchMark Physical Therapy. They have…

  • The Great Opt-Out: How Cash-Pay Medicine Is Reshaping Access for the Working Middle

    Healthcare delivery in Southern Oregon — and nationally — is shifting. As traditional insurance becomes less affordable and more administratively burdensome, a growing number of clinicians are moving toward Direct Primary Care (DPC) and cash-pay models. This transition is often portrayed as clinician innovation or consumer choice, but it carries structural consequences for the working…

  • Most conversations about healthcare start in the exam room. That’s understandable. Care feels personal. It happens one patient at a time, often in moments of vulnerability, urgency, or relief. So when something feels broken—long waits, limited access, rushed visits—we instinctively look to the people closest to the experience: clinicians, hospitals, or policymakers. But the most…

  • Southern Oregon doesn’t suffer from a lack of people who care about healthcare. It suffers from a system that makes caring harder than it needs to be. Across Jackson and Josephine counties, patients report difficulty accessing care, providers report burnout and overload, and communities experience growing mistrust toward medical institutions. These issues are often discussed…

  • Healthcare doesn’t fail because people stop caring. It fails when systems designed for a different era are asked to meet modern needs. Across Southern Oregon, clinicians, administrators, and community leaders are navigating a quiet but consequential transition. Digital tools—once seen as add-ons—are becoming the infrastructure through which care is coordinated, decisions are made, and trust…

  • In Southern Oregon, healthcare is often described as available. Clinics exist. Hospitals operate. Insurance coverage—particularly through Medicaid—has expanded dramatically over the past decade. On paper, access appears to be improving. And yet, for many people living in poverty, healthcare remains functionally out of reach. Not because services don’t exist—but because an invisible wall stands between…

  • Throughout our exploration of the healthcare experience, one fundamental truth has stood out: true collaboration between patients and providers enhances care. By closely examining patient-provider interactions, reviewing various relationship models, and gathering firsthand experiences from both sides, we’ve uncovered key insights that influence the quality of healthcare today.  Trust repeatedly surfaces as a crucial element…