You need an In Person Visit to ER in the situations below. We are state licensed, free-standing Emergency Rooms. We treat a wide range of common emergency room symptoms. Our facilities are open 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year.
Head
- Severe Headache
- Migraine
- Seizures
- Loss of Consciousness
- Dizziness
- Slurred/Impaired Speech
- Stroke
- TIA – Transient Ischemic Attacks
- Head Injuries
- Concussions
Face
- Blurred/Double Vision
- Eye Injury
- TMJ
- Nosebleeds
- Foreign Bodie (Ear/ Nose)
- Ear Pain
- Sinus Infection
- Allergies
Throat
- Difficulty Swallowing
- Overdose
- Accidental Poisoning
- Chemical Exposure
- Swallowing Foreign Object
- Sore Throat
Chest
- Chest Pain
- Heart Attack
- Congestive Heart Failure
- Irregular Heart Beat
- High Blood Pressure
Lungs
- Asthma
- Shortness of Breath
- Difficulty Breathing
- Pneumonia
- Blood Clots
- Bronchitis
Abdomen / Pelvis
- Appendicitis
- Kidney Stones
- Stomach Pain
- Vomiting
- Diarrhea
- Dehydration
- Gall Stones
- Urinary Tract Infection
- Blood in Urine/Stool
- Pelvic Pain
- Vaginal Bleeding
- Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Extremitites / Skin
- Abscess
- Allergic Reactions
- Cellulitis
- Dislocations
- Fractures
- Lacerations
- Animal Bites
- Burns
- Rashes
Trauma Injuries
- Falls
- Car Wrecks
- ATV Accidents
- Sports Injuries
- Gun Shot Wounds
- Stabbings
- Drownings
An in-person visit at a doctor’s office simply means you physically go to the clinic and see the doctor face-to-face.
Here’s what that usually includes:
- You travel to the medical office
- Check in at the front desk
- Sit in the exam room
- The doctor or provider examines you directly (listens to your heart/lungs, checks vitals, etc.)
- You can get tests done on-site (blood work, imaging, procedures)
How it’s different from other visits:
- In-person visit: You are there physically
- Telehealth / virtual visit: You talk to the doctor by video or phone from home
- Copays are same for both visits
Why it matters:
Doctors may require an in-person visit when they need to:
- Do a physical exam
- Perform procedures or injections
- Get accurate vital signs
- Evaluate something that can’t be assessed over video (like a rash, joint movement, chest pain, shortness of breath or abdomen pain and wound care)
