The $41,000 Question Every HR Director Is Asking

Every year, US employers spend an estimated $41 billion on avoidable emergency room visits — visits that could have been handled in a primary care setting for a fraction of the cost. If you run an HR department with 50 or more employees, a significant portion of your health spend is going toward cases that never needed to end up in an ER in the first place.

The problem is structural. Employees don't have a relationship with a primary care doctor. They get sick or injured, they can't get a same-day appointment, and the ER becomes the default. It's not negligence — it's a system designed to fail.

Direct Primary Care (DPC) changes that equation. And if you're an HR leader or benefits broker trying to reduce unnecessary ER visits, DPC is the lever you haven't fully pulled yet.

This article covers the data on why ERs are overwhelmed with non-emergency cases, how DPC practices intercept those cases before they escalate, what the employer ROI looks like, and how to implement a DPC strategy that actually moves the needle.


The ER Crisis: Why Non-Emergency Cases Are Overwhelming Emergency Departments

Let's be precise about what "unnecessary" means. An unnecessary ER visit is not a visit for a condition that turned out to be nothing. It's a visit for a condition that should never have been handled in an emergency department in the first place — because it didn't require emergency-level diagnostic capability, surgical intervention, or hospital admission.

The numbers are stark:

The ER is not designed for this. When a patient with a sprained ankle waits 4 hours next to a patient having a heart attack, the system is failing everyone — the sprained ankle patient gets delayed care, the heart attack patient gets a crowded waiting room, and the hospital absorbs costs it wasn't designed to absorb from a population that can't pay.

The consequence for employers: When employees use the ER for non-emergency conditions, companies pay through higher premiums, higher stop-loss charges, and lower productivity. The ER is the most expensive point of care in the healthcare system, and using it for primary-care-level problems is like using a helicopter to go to the grocery store.


What Is Direct Primary Care (DPC)?

Direct Primary Care is a membership-based primary care model where:

DPC practices are typically independent family or internal medicine practices that have "fired" insurance companies and operate on membership revenue instead. They carry smaller patient panels (typically 400–800 patients per provider vs. 2,500–3,500 in traditional primary care), which allows them to spend more time with each patient and actually know their history.

The key feature for ER diversion: DPC doctors have open scheduling slots because they're not filling their day with 30 patients who need 7 minutes each. A patient who calls at 8am with an acute urinary tract infection can get seen at 10am — not next Tuesday.


The Mechanism: How DPC Reduces Unnecessary ER Visits

DPC reduces ER utilization through three interlocking mechanisms.

Mechanism 1: Same-Day Acute Care Access

The single biggest driver of unnecessary ER use is access failure — employees can't get in to see their primary care doctor when they're sick. The average wait time for a primary care appointment in the US is 24 days (Merritt Hawkins, 2024 Survey). For a urinary tract infection that needs treatment today, 24 days is useless.

DPC practices solve this with:

When an employee can call their DPC doctor at 8am and be seen at 10am for a fever and sore throat, they don't go to the ER. They go to their doctor. That single interaction — if it happens — eliminates an ER visit that would have cost 10–20x more.

Mechanism 2: Relationship-Based Care That Catches Escalation Early

Traditional primary care is episodic. You show up when you're sick; the doctor doesn't know you when you're well. DPC is longitudinal — the doctor knows your history, your medications, your social context, and your risk factors.

This matters for ER diversion because many ER visits are the endpoint of an escalation that wasn't caught early enough. A patient with worsening CHF symptoms who hasn't seen a doctor in 18 months because they couldn't get an appointment ends up in the ER when they decompensate. A DPC doctor who sees that patient every 3 months catches the early signs of decompensation and manages them before they become a crisis.

The data supports this: DPC-enrolled patients have 35–45% fewer ER visits for ambulatory-care-sensitive conditions (conditions that should be managed in primary care, not emergencies) compared to matched controls.

Mechanism 3: High-Acuity Management in the DPC Setting

DPC practices handle a broader range of acute conditions than most people assume. The average DPC encounter includes:

None of these require an ER. A DPC doctor with extended time and basic lab/X-ray capability can handle 80–90% of what walks into an urgent care center — and they do it at DPC cost, not urgent care cost.


The Employer ROI: What the Data Shows

For HR teams and benefits leaders, the question is simple: does DPC save more than it costs?

The evidence from employer DPC implementations:

Carilion Clinic (Virginia, self-insured):

Pardee Hospital (North Carolina, self-insured):

Employer coalitions (general DPC literature):

The $41K Calculation

For a mid-sized employer (500 employees, 70% enrollment in DPC):

Line Item Calculation Annual Impact
ER visits prevented ~60 fewer ER visits/year (30% of baseline)
Cost per avoided ER visit Average $3,200 (ambulatory-sensitive)
Gross savings 60 visits × $3,200 $192,000
DPC membership cost 350 employees × $900/year ($315,000)
Net cost (new program) ($123,000)
Stop-loss premium reduction 15% fewer high-cost claimants, ~$85/employee ($29,750)
Productivity improvement Fewer ER visits + faster recovery ~$40,000
Net impact ($112,750)

This is a rough model — actual results depend heavily on population health profile, DPC practice quality, and implementation design. But the range is meaningful: a well-implemented DPC program typically breaks even at the direct cost level and generates ROI through downstream effects on stop-loss, absenteeism, and productivity.

For a self-insured employer with a high-risk population, the ROI is better. For a fully insured employer, the mechanism is different (your carrier captures the savings and reflects them in next year's renewal), but you can negotiate a performance guarantee tied to ER utilization metrics.


How to Implement a DPC Strategy for ER Diversion

If you're an HR director or benefits broker evaluating DPC for an employer client, here's the implementation sequence.

Step 1: Audit Current ER Utilization

Before you implement anything, you need a baseline. Pull the past 2 years of medical claims data and categorize ER visits by ICD-10 code. Identify:

A typical mid-sized employer (500 employees) has 200–350 ER visits per year. Of those, 60–100 are avoidable (ACSC or low-acuity). That's $192,000–$320,000 in potentially reducible spend.

Step 2: Design the DPC Benefit

For an employer group, DPC is typically offered as:

For most SMB clients, voluntary with employer subsidy is the right starting point — it gets 15–25% enrollment initially and demonstrates ROI that justifies expanding to mandatory enrollment in year 2.

DPC provider selection criteria:

Step 3: Communicate to Employees

ER diversion only works if employees actually use the DPC benefit. The communication challenge is significant: most employees don't know they have DPC access or don't understand when to use it vs. the ER vs. urgent care.

Effective communication includes:

Step 4: Measure and Optimize

Track these metrics quarterly:

If DPC enrollment is below 20% after 90 days, investigate: is the provider accessible? Is the communication landing? Is the benefit actually useful?


The Referral Path: Concierge Health for Complex Cases

For employers that want to go beyond standard DPC, the concierge health model offers a higher-touch option with dedicated care navigation. Concierge practices typically offer:

The ER diversion effect is even more pronounced in concierge models because the physician relationship is stronger and the barrier to accessing care is lower. For employers with 100+ employees and a high-risk or high-cost population, concierge health can be worth the higher membership cost ($200–$400/month per employee) if it prevents even a small number of high-cost ER admissions.

Explore concierge health solutions →


The Bottom Line for HR Leaders

Non-emergency ER use is a system failure, not a patient failure. Employees go to the ER because they can't access primary care when they need it. The solution isn't more education about when to go to the ER — it's building a primary care alternative that is genuinely more accessible.

DPC is that alternative. For a typical mid-sized employer, a well-implemented DPC program:

The implementation is straightforward: audit your ER data, select a quality DPC provider, communicate the benefit effectively, and measure the results.


How NudgeWell Helps

NudgeWell's benefits engagement platform tracks when employees use ERs for non-emergency conditions and sends targeted nudges to route them to appropriate care settings — including DPC and concierge options where available. For HR teams, NudgeWell provides the utilization analytics to measure ER diversion ROI and identify employees who are highest-risk for unnecessary ER use.

Learn more about NudgeWell for HR teams →

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NudgeWell is an AI-powered benefits engagement platform for SMB HR. We help employees actually use the benefits they're paying for — starting with primary care.

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