EPISODE · Dec 14, 2024 · 37 MIN
Direct Primary Care: Reducing Malpractice Risks
from My DPC Story · host My DPC Story
In this episode, you'll hear from Dr. Robert Pope and Dr. Neal Douglas as they discuss the critical issue of malpractice for independent Direct Primary Care (DPC) physicians. Dr. Pope recounts his journey through internal medicine, administrative roles at major insurance companies, and his contributions to creating CARE as a malpractice insurance solution. He discusses the evolution of the hospitalist movement, the importance of continuity of care, and the impact of effective, high-quality doctor-patient relationships in reducing litigation risks. Dr. Douglas highlights not only the advantages of the DPC model, such as personalized care and reduced bureaucracy, he also shares his successful experience partnering with CARE for his own DPC malpractice policy, largely driven by the fact that CARE not only understands and believes in the DPC movement and the high quality of care that DPC physicians brings to patients, but that it backs that up with tailored, more affordable and robust malpractice plans for DPC doctors. CLICK HERE TO GET YOUR MALPRACTICE QUOTE FROM CARE TODAY.Support the showGET your FREE MONTHLY BUSINESS TOOL DOWNLOADBecome A My DPC Story PATREON MEMBER! SPONSOR THE PODMy DPC Story VOICEMAIL! DPC SWAG!FACEBOOK * INSTAGRAM * LinkedIn * TWITTER * TIKTOK * YouTube
What this episode covers
In this episode, you'll hear from Dr. Robert Pope and Dr. Neal Douglas as they discuss the critical issue of malpractice for independent Direct Primary Care (DPC) physicians. Dr. Pope recounts his journey through internal medicine, administrative roles at major insurance companies, and his contributions to creating CARE as a malpractice insurance solution. He discusses the evolution of the hospitalist movement, the importance of continuity of care, and the impact of effective, high-quality ...
NOW PLAYING
Direct Primary Care: Reducing Malpractice Risks
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
Apr 15, 2026 ·28m
Mar 12, 2026 ·14m
Feb 17, 2026 ·21m
Feb 14, 2026 ·11m
Jan 5, 2026 ·61m
Dec 29, 2025 ·33m