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Fall 2025 Edition
Alumni & Friends Magazine

The Doctor Will Subscribe You Now

A new model is helping address the primary health care gap in rural Ohio.

Mary Reed, BSJ 鈥90, MA 鈥93 | November 20, 2025

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Bill Reed has chronic high blood pressure, requiring regular doctor visits. So he travels across town to the Chillicothe office of Dr. Shandra Basil鈥攈oused in a natural light-filled, stately old home across from the public library.

鈥淭ime is the big thing. I don鈥檛 think I鈥檝e ever had an appointment that wasn鈥檛 at least an hour with her,鈥 Reed says. That鈥檚 more than triple a national average of just 18 minutes, according to a . But the visit duration isn鈥檛 the only distinguishing factor of Basil鈥檚 practice.

After Reed gets his blood pressure measured, receives his prescriptions and maybe spends a few minutes talking local sports, he simply walks out the door: no bill, no paperwork, no insurance. Instead, he pays a for all primary care services. That鈥檚 because in addition to her role as an assistant clinical professor in OHIO鈥檚 Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, Basil, DO 鈥18, operates under a business model known as direct primary care (DPC).

鈥淚 like to describe it as a modern take on old-school medicine,鈥 she says, 鈥渨here patients can really have the patient-physician relationship鈥攖o the level of home visits when that鈥檚 necessary.鈥

Shandra Basil wins award at OOS
Dr. Shandra Basil

Indeed, Basil makes home visits for newborns and for her elderly patients who are homebound or otherwise have trouble getting to one of her three offices in Chillicothe, Columbus or Johnstown, Ohio.

Basil first learned of DPC from a presentation about the model to her Family Medicine Club while she was a student at Heritage College鈥檚 Dublin campus. From that point on, she worked toward opening her own practice in 2021.

鈥淥n the Dublin campus, I feel like we developed a culture there that was very family-oriented. It was just a group of 50 of us; we got to know each other well and supported each other well,鈥 she recalls, crediting that support with helping her become the physician she is today and instilling in her a desire to provide the same level of support to her patients.

Basil finds that the successes and challenges in treating her 300-some patients are often the same. 鈥淏eing able to advocate for patients in a system that鈥檚 broken鈥擨 find that鈥檚 something we do on a regular basis,鈥 she says. That might look like getting a patient into a specialist in a timely manner or calling about a lab overcharge on their behalf.

Ultimately, she helps her patients by simply providing access to primary care for those who cannot afford to pay for high health insurance premiums or deductibles before they even receive care鈥攖o say nothing of the additional costs accrued for said care. A lack of insurance or costs associated with a high-deductible plan mean such patients might forgo primary care that would prevent an even more expensive emergency visit. 

a female doctor wearing gloves and a white coat uses a stethoscope to listen to a smiling patient鈥檚 chest during an exam in a brightly lit room

Direct primary care has been a fast-growing segment of the health care field over the past 10 years. Many see it as a viable alternative to the traditional fee-for-service model. both patient and provider satisfaction with DPC. Basil thinks the model is both patient-centered and physician-centered.

鈥淭he flexibility that it provides me to be a mom that shows up for my kids, just picking them up from school鈥攎ost physicians don鈥檛 get to do those types of things because of the nature of the job,鈥 she says. A DPC model allows Basil to set her own hours, and her time isn鈥檛 eaten up dealing with billing or health insurance.

Figures on health outcomes are harder to come by. 鈥淭here is certainly Medicare data, Medicaid data, CHIP data, because that鈥檚 all public,鈥 says Dan Skinner, professor of health policy at Heritage College. 鈥淏ut DPC is all private, so we don鈥檛 have any accessible information 鈥 to show they鈥檙e driving health outcomes.鈥

Skinner knows DPC is not the solution to the nation鈥檚 staggering health care problems. But, he allows, it helps many people. 鈥淧atients need health care,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his is a way to do it.鈥