Why This Practice Exists
Modern healthcare has become transactional. Visits are rushed, care is fragmented, and patients are often passed between offices and systems without anyone truly overseeing the whole picture.
People receive better care when they have a doctor who knows them, understands their history, and takes responsibility for guiding their care over time. Trust, context, and continuity matter.
This practice exists to restore that model.
Care is delivered outside of insurance so medical decisions can be guided by patients, not billing rules. A direct, subscription-based approach allows more time, easier access, and clearer guidance. Insurance still has an important role for emergencies and hospital care, but it should not dictate everyday medicine.
Technology is used to support the relationship, not replace it. Virtual care, secure communication, and preparedness tools exist to make care more responsive while keeping the physician-patient relationship at the center.
Medicine works best when it is personal again.
I am a board-certified emergency medicine physician, but my approach to medicine was shaped long before I ever worked in an emergency department.
For nearly 20 years, I worked alongside my father in family practice and urgent care. During that time, I learned that the best medical care comes from relationships. It comes from knowing patients over time, understanding their lives, and taking responsibility for their care beyond a single visit.
That foundation, combined with formal training in emergency medicine, allows me to provide thoughtful, practical care across a wide range of needs, from everyday health concerns to unexpected medical issues.
I believe people get the best care from a doctor who knows them and who they know and trust. This practice exists to bring that kind of medicine back, using modern tools while staying grounded in old-school values.
If you would like to contact me directly, please email me.