A house call is a medical service in which a physician or other qualified healthcare provider visits a patient's home to conduct examinations, provide diagnoses, prescribe treatments, or manage ongoing care, often for individuals with mobility limitations or chronic conditions that make clinic visits challenging.[1] This practice, rooted in ancient medical traditions across civilizations, became the dominant mode of primary care delivery until the mid-20th century, when advancements in diagnostic technology, the shift to office-based practices for efficiency, and changes in health insurance reimbursement structures—particularly Medicare's lower payments for home visits—led to a sharp decline, with U.S. Medicare-billed house calls dropping 31% from 1988 to 1993.[2][3]Empirical evidence indicates that house calls yield tangible benefits, including reduced hospital readmission rates, lower overall healthcare costs through early intervention, and improved detection of environmental factors influencing patienthealth, such as homesafety hazards or medication mismanagement, which are often overlooked in clinical settings.[1][4] In recent years, house calls have experienced a resurgence driven by an aging population—projected to increase demand for in-home services—and technological enablers like portable diagnostics and electronic health records, with the global market expanding from $2.69 billion in 2024 to an anticipated $2.88 billion in 2025 amid efforts to address access barriers for frail elderly patients.[5][6] Despite these advantages, challenges persist, including physician time inefficiencies from travel and security concerns in unfamiliar settings, which have historically deterred widespread adoption.[7]
Definition and Scope
Core Definition and Practices
A house call consists of a healthcare provider, most commonly a physician, delivering medical evaluation, diagnosis, treatment, or management directly at a patient's residence rather than in a clinical office or hospital setting.[1] This approach enables observation of the patient's living environment, daily routines, and support systems, which can inform more accurate assessments of conditions influenced by social determinants such as mobility limitations or home hazards.[8] House calls are particularly applied to homebound individuals, those with chronic illnesses, acute needs preventing travel, or end-of-life care requirements, serving as a component of primary care or palliative services.[9]Core practices in conducting house calls emphasize preparation to ensure efficacy and safety. Providers review patient medical records, anticipate potential needs based on history, and assemble portable kits including diagnostic tools like stethoscopes, blood pressure monitors, glucometers, and basic medications, while coordinating with multidisciplinary teams such as nurses or social workers when applicable.[1] Scheduling accounts for travel time, with visits typically lasting 30-60 minutes, focusing on comprehensive history-taking, physical examinations adapted to the home setting, and on-site interventions like wound care or minor procedures where feasible.[8] Documentation remains critical, mirroring office standards, to support continuity, billing, and legal requirements, often using electronic health records accessible remotely.[1]Safety protocols form an integral practice, with providers verifying addresses, traveling in pairs for high-risk areas, carrying emergency supplies, and establishing communication lines for support during visits.[1] Post-visit follow-up includes arranging referrals, home health services, or telehealth integration to bridge gaps until subsequent encounters.[4] In modern iterations, some programs incorporate on-demand models via apps for non-emergent acute issues, expanding access beyond traditional homebound care while adhering to these foundational practices.[9]
Types and Applications
House calls primarily serve homebound patients, with applications focused on chronicdisease management, environmental assessments, and specialized care for vulnerable populations.[1] Common services include comprehensive physical exams, medication reconciliation, nutrition evaluations, and orders for laboratory tests or imaging conducted at home.[1] These visits address barriers to clinic access, such as mobility limitations, particularly among older adults comprising the majority of recipients.[1]Geriatric house calls target elderly patients with multiple comorbidities, emphasizing functional assessments in the home setting to identify fall risks, caregiver burdens, and unmet needs that clinic visits might overlook.[9]In the United States, demand has risen with an aging population, where approximately 2 million adults over age 65 are homebound, prompting programs for primary care delivery including urgent evaluations and chronic condition oversight.[1] Applications extend to preventing hospitalizations by optimizing care plans tailored to the patient's living environment.[10]Palliative house calls provide symptom control, psychosocial support, and crisis interventions for patients with serious illnesses preferring home-based end-of-life care.[11] These services, often integrated with hospice, facilitate advance care planning, pain management, and family counseling without requiring facility transfers.[12] Programs like those at Weill Cornell deliver multidisciplinary assessments during acute exacerbations, aiming to maintain dignity and comfort in familiar surroundings.[11]Pediatric house calls, though less prevalent, apply to infants and children with acute illnesses, offering diagnostics, treatments, and prescriptions at home to reduce exposure to contagious diseases in waiting rooms.[13] Benefits include enhanced parental convenience and minimized stress from travel, particularly for newborns or during outbreaks, with providers conducting exams and minor procedures on-site.[14] Such visits support early intervention for common conditions like respiratory infections or fevers.[15]Additional applications encompass primary care for non-elderly homebound individuals, including wound care, vaccinations, and mental health evaluations adapted to in-home constraints.[16] In underserved areas, house calls bridge access gaps by incorporating mobile diagnostics and referrals, evolving from acute response models to proactive chronic care strategies.[17]
Historical Development
Origins Through the 19th Century
The practice of physicians visiting patients' homes for medical care originated in ancient civilizations, where healers routinely traveled to residences to assess symptoms, provide treatments, and offer advice, as institutional medical facilities were virtually nonexistent. In ancient Greece, for instance, figures like Hippocrates emphasized direct observation of patients in their living environments, a method that informed the foundational principles of clinical medicine and persisted as the primary delivery mode for healthcare.[18] This home-based approach aligned with the era's limited understanding of contagion and absence of centralized hospitals, making on-site evaluation essential for conditions ranging from fevers to wounds.During the medieval and early modern periods in Europe, house calls remained the dominant practice, with physicians navigating by foot or horse to perform consultations, bleedings, and herbal remedies amid rudimentary diagnostic capabilities. The lack of reliable hospitals—often reserved for the indigent or plague victims—reinforced reliance on domiciliary care, where family members assisted in procedures under professional guidance. In colonial America, this tradition carried over, with early physicians addressing most ailments at home due to sparse infrastructure and the preference for familiar settings over distant almshouses.[19]In the 19th century, house calls peaked as the cornerstone of medical practice, comprising the majority of physician-patient interactions in urban and rural settings alike, driven by ongoing hospital limitations and pre-antiseptic infection rates exceeding 40% in some facilities. Physicians, increasingly trained in emerging sciences, carried portable kits—evolving into the iconic "black bag" by mid-century—stocked with tools like the stethoscope (invented 1816), lancets, and opiates for on-site diagnoses, deliveries, and interventions such as abscess drainages or fracture settings, often in kitchens or bedrooms.[20][21] Rural doctors in the United States, for example, covered vast circuits by buggy, treating diverse cases from cholera outbreaks to childbirths, while urban practitioners managed high volumes amid industrialization's disease burdens.[22] This era saw professionalization via medical schools, yet home visits persisted due to patient distrust of hospitals and logistical necessities, with most births and chronic care occurring domestically until late-century shifts toward outpatient clinics.[23]
20th Century Expansion and Decline
In the early 20th century, house calls remained a cornerstone of medical practice in the United States, constituting approximately 40% of all physician-patient encounters by 1930.[4] This prevalence reflected the limitations of outpatient facilities and the necessity of bedside assessment for many conditions, with physicians averaging multiple home visits per patient illness toward the late 1920s.[24] The advent of automobiles facilitated greater mobility for doctors, potentially enabling more extensive home-based care in rural and suburban areas during this period.[24]The mid-20th century marked the onset of significant decline, driven by technological advancements that shifted care toward hospitals and clinics.[25] Key factors included the widespread availability of antibiotics like penicillin in the 1940s, which reduced the need for prolonged home monitoring of infectious diseases, and the development of diagnostic tools such as X-rays and laboratory testing that required specialized equipment unavailable in homes.[25] Increased medical specialization and the construction of modern hospitals further centralized care, making office and inpatient visits more efficient for complex interventions.[4]By the 1970s, house calls had plummeted to about 1% of physician activities, with only 5% of general practitioners' care occurring in patients' homes in 1972.[20][17] Economic disincentives compounded the trend, as travel time rendered home visits less reimbursable compared to office-based practices, a disparity exacerbated by evolving insurance models favoring institutional care.[20] By 1980, house calls accounted for just 0.6% of encounters, solidifying their marginal role in standard medical delivery.[25]
Empirical Benefits and Outcomes
Clinical Evidence and Patient Impacts
A systematic review of nine studies involving 46,156 homebound older adults found that home-based primary care, including house calls, was associated with fewer hospitalizations, emergency department visits, and nursing home admissions compared to usual care.[1] These outcomes stem from enhanced chronic disease management and preventive care delivered in the patient's home environment, allowing physicians to assess living conditions, medication adherence, and social support factors unavailable in office settings.[8]For patients with chronic multimorbidity, home visiting programs have demonstrated potential benefits in reducing functional decline and improving quality of life, though results vary across studies due to differences in intervention intensity and patient populations.[26] Elderly patients receiving house calls report higher satisfaction rates, with one analysis indicating positive effects on adherence to medication regimens and health-related quality of life metrics.[27] Multidisciplinary house call teams have shown reductions in hospital readmissions and long-term care placements, particularly for frail individuals with mobility limitations.[8]In hospital-at-home models incorporating physician home visits, patients experienced lower rates of depression and anxiety alongside noninferior clinical outcomes to inpatient care, highlighting psychological benefits from familiar surroundings.[28] However, randomized trials indicate mixed evidence on superiority over office-based or telephone follow-up, with home visits excelling in transitional care for discharged patients by lowering readmission risks through direct environmental evaluation.[29] Overall, house calls mitigate isolation for homebound patients, fostering proactive interventions that correlate with sustained health stability in chronicdisease trajectories.[30]
Economic and Systemic Advantages
House calls yield economic advantages primarily through reductions in overall healthcare expenditures by averting costly emergency department visits and hospitalizations. In the Medicare Independence at Home demonstration, participating practices achieved average savings of $3,070 per beneficiary in the first performance year by delivering coordinated home-based primary care to high-need Medicare enrollees.[31] These savings stemmed from a 23% decrease in hospitalizations and a 27% reduction in readmissions over two years, alongside a 44% drop in ambulatory care-sensitive hospitalizations.[31] Similarly, the U.S. Medical Management accountable care organization reported $2,450 in savings per patient across 20,750 beneficiaries in one year through house call integration.[4]For vulnerable populations such as the elderly and chronically ill, house calls enhance cost-effectiveness by substituting lower-cost ambulatory interventions for institutional care. The Department of Veterans Affairs Home Based Primary Care program reduced hospital days by 60%, 30-day readmissions by 21%, and nursing home utilization by 89%, contributing to substantial systemic efficiencies.[4][32] MedStar WashingtonHospital Center's initiative saved $8,400 per patient and $6.1 million overall over two years via 9% fewer hospitalizations and 10% fewer emergency visits.[4] Across demonstrations like Independence at Home, total Medicare savings reached $82 million over four years for 10,000 beneficiaries, underscoring the model's viability for scaling value-based payment structures.[4]Systemically, house calls optimize resource allocation by prioritizing care for homebound patients who strain hospital capacities, thereby improving bed availability and reducing wait times elsewhere in the system. This approach aligns with accountable care organizations and Medicare Advantage plans, where enhanced diagnosis capture for risk adjustment and superior performance on quality metrics—such as timely hospital follow-ups and medication reconciliation—bolster financial incentives.[4] By mitigating fragmented care transitions, house calls decrease readmission penalties under programs like the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program, fostering broader healthcare sustainability without compromising outcomes.[33] In 2020, Independence at Home participants reduced Medicare spending by 11%, a statistically significant figure amid heightened demands from the COVID-19 pandemic.[34]
Challenges and Criticisms
Logistical and Operational Barriers
The time-intensive nature of travel constitutes a primary logistical barrier to house calls, as physicians must navigate varying distances between patients' residences, often without automated routing tools integrated into electronic medical records. This extends visit durations and limits daily capacity, with home-based practices typically conducting only 3-8 visits per provider owing to manual scheduling and transit demands.[35] In a Canadian survey of 73 urban family physicians, travel logistics ranked alongside time constraints as key deterrents.[36]Home environments frequently lack the controlled conditions of clinical settings, restricting diagnostic capabilities and introducing operational hazards such as inadequate space, non-sterile conditions, and unpredictable interruptions that hinder thorough assessments. Physicians report difficulties in managing consultations amid family distractions or cluttered spaces, which compromise examination quality and efficiency.[36] Personal safety concerns, including potential exposure to unsafe neighborhoods or aggressive situations, further amplify these risks, as noted in surveys from multiple countries.[36]The portability of medical equipment remains a core operational limitation, as advanced tools like X-ray machines, MRI scanners, or laboratory analyzers cannot feasibly be transported or deployed in homes, necessitating patient referrals to specialized facilities for comprehensive evaluations.[5] Electronic medical records systems, often optimized for stationary office use, exacerbate this by offering reduced functionality during mobile visits, complicating real-time documentation and care coordination.[35] Insufficient training in home-based care protocols leaves many providers feeling unprepared for these adaptive demands, contributing to operational inefficiencies observed in declining house call volumes, such as a reduction from 125 to 75 annual visits per Swissphysician between 2006 and 2015.[36]
Reimbursement and Professional Incentives
Reimbursement for physician house calls in the United States primarily occurs through the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (PFS), utilizing Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes 99341–99350 for home or domiciliary visits, which require the physician's physical presence at the patient's location.[37] These codes assign relative value units (RVUs) that generally exceed those for equivalent-complexity office visits (e.g., CPT 99201–99215), providing higher base payments to offset anticipated travel demands; for instance, historical Medicare rates ranged from approximately $55 to $232 per visit following 1990s adjustments aimed at encouraging such services.[38] However, the 2025 PFS final rule imposes a 2.93% average reduction in payment rates across services, including house calls, exacerbating financial pressures amid ongoing conversion factor declines (e.g., from $33.29 in 2024 to $32.35 in 2025).[39] Private insurers and Medicaid programs often mirror these codes but vary in coverage, with many reimbursing only medically necessary visits while excluding travel expenses like mileage or equipment transport, which physicians must absorb.[40]Professional incentives for house calls remain limited due to net reimbursement shortfalls after accounting for time inefficiencies and unreimbursed costs. Surveys of primary care physicians identify inadequate remuneration as a primary barrier, as house calls demand 2–3 times longer per patient than office equivalents, yet yield comparable or marginally higher gross payments insufficient to cover overhead.[36] For example, while CPT codes incentivize via elevated RVUs, the lack of bundled travel compensation—unlike some hospital-based services—results in lower effective hourly earnings, deterring adoption; only about 1.8 million Medicare house calls are billed annually, far below potential demand among homebound patients.[41]Medicaid rates, often below Medicare levels, further discourage participation, with physicians citing them as a key reason for limited acceptance of such patients.[42]Emerging models offer targeted incentives to counter these disincentives. Programs like the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services' Independence at Home Demonstration provide shared savings bonuses to practices reducing hospitalizations through proactive house calls, tying payments to cost efficiencies and quality metrics rather than fee-for-service volume.[43] Similarly, accountable care organizations (ACOs) increasingly incorporate home visits for high-risk patients, with financial rewards for improved outcomes, though implementation barriers persist due to staffing and resource constraints.[44] Despite these, broad systemic reliance on volume-based payments favors office-centric practices, limiting house calls' scalability without policy reforms addressing travel and time valuation.[45]
Regional Variations
North America
In North America, house calls by physicians remain a niche but expanding component of primary care delivery, primarily serving homebound elderly patients, those with chronic conditions, and individuals facing access barriers to clinic-based services. The United States leads the region in formalized house call programs, with market valuations reflecting growing demand driven by an aging population and post-acute care needs; the U.S. house calls market reached USD 537.7 million in 2022 and is projected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 5.62% through 2030.[46] Home-based primary care (HBPC) initiatives support over 2 million homebound Americans aged 65 and older, emphasizing comprehensive assessments, chronic disease management, and coordination with other services to enable aging in place.[47]In the United States, practices often integrate house calls into Medicare Advantage plans and direct primary care models, with providers like UnitedHealthcare's HouseCalls program offering free annual in-home evaluations for eligible beneficiaries, including preventive screenings and medication reviews. On-demand house call services have emerged to address acute needs among non-elderly patients, expanding access beyond traditional office visits and appealing to those seeking convenience for minor illnesses. Major health systems, such as Northwell Health and Inova, operate dedicated house call teams that deliver routine care, diagnostics like ultrasounds and EKGs, and post-operative follow-up directly at patients' homes, reducing reliance on emergency departments.[48][9][49] Despite this growth, house calls constitute a small fraction of overall physician encounters, with logistical demands limiting widespread adoption among general practitioners.Canada's approach to house calls emphasizes family physician-led visits, particularly in provinces like Ontario, where billing data indicate a 37% increase in physician home visits from 2005/06 to 2018/19, driven by rising demand for end-of-life and palliative care. In 2019, Ontario family physicians conducted 387,139 home visits, though this represented less than 1% of total office visits, with a concentrated effort by a small subset: the top 5% of providers (330 physicians) accounted for over half of all such encounters. Access challenges persist, as only 23% of Canadians report ease in obtaining after-hours or weekend care, prompting some reliance on virtual alternatives over in-person home visits. For patients in their last year of life referred to home care, just 5.3% received a visit from their rostered physician, highlighting gaps in routine integration compared to U.S. insurance-driven models.[50][51][52][53][54]
United States Practices and Data
![A doctor from the Leakey, Texas, area visiting an elderly patient near San Antonio][float-right]In the United States, house calls, often termed home-based primary care (HBPC), are delivered primarily to homebound patients with complex chronic conditions, such as frail elderly individuals unable to visit clinics easily.[55] These services typically involve interdisciplinary teams comprising physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, nurses, and social workers, focusing on comprehensive assessments, medication management, and coordination of care in the patient's residence.[40] Practices emphasize longitudinal relationships, with providers conducting regular visits to monitor health status and prevent hospitalizations, often integrating palliative care elements for end-of-life patients.[56]Medicare reimbursement supports these practices through dedicated CPT codes for home or domiciliary visits (99341-99350 for new and established patients), which account for evaluation, management, travel time, and higher complexity compared to office visits; payments range from approximately $100 for low-complexity established patient visits to over $200 for high-complexity new patients, varying by geographic adjustment.[37] Unlike home health services requiring homebound status, physician house calls under Medicare Part B do not mandate this criterion, enabling broader access, though medical necessity must be documented.[57] Private insurers often follow similar fee-for-service models, but dedicated HBPC programs may participate in value-based initiatives like Medicare's Independence at Home Demonstration, which tested shared savings for practices reducing hospitalizations.[58]Utilization data indicate house calls constitute a small fraction of total physician-patient encounters, with only about 1,000 HBPC providers nationwide performing over 500 visits annually, representing roughly half of all such calls.[4] Among Medicare beneficiaries, home-based care serves millions of homebound seniors, with HBPC supporting over 2 million Americans aged 65 and older facing access barriers.[47] The home care workforce, including HBPC personnel, expanded modestly from 14,100 in 2012 to 16,600 in 2016, driven by nurse practitioners amid physician shortages.[59] Market analyses project the U.S. house calls sector to reach $623.08 million in 2025, growing at a 5.45% CAGR to $812.28 million by 2030, fueled by an aging population and chronic disease prevalence.[60]Post-2020 trends show a resurgence in physical house calls alongside telehealth expansion, prompted by COVID-19 vulnerabilities among homebound patients and policy flexibilities, though precise physician house call volumes remain under 1% of primary care visits.[32] Programs like the Department of Veterans Affairs HBPC, serving high-risk veterans since the early 2010s, demonstrate scalability, with innovations in team-based delivery yielding reduced emergency visits.[61] Early Independence at Home results reported average savings of $3,070 per beneficiary in the first year through lowered inpatient costs.[40] Despite growth, barriers persist, including low provider adoption—only 62% of surveyed young family physicians in older data reported making house calls—and logistical challenges in rural areas.[62]
Canadian Approaches
In Canada, house calls by physicians are integrated into the publicly funded provincial healthcare systems, with reimbursement available through plans such as Ontario Health Insurance Plan (OHIP) for eligible patients unable to access clinic-based care due to mobility limitations or frailty.[63] These visits are predominantly performed by family physicians, focusing on homebound seniors, palliative care, and end-of-life management, rather than routine primary care. Provincial data indicate low overall utilization; for instance, in Ontario in 2019, only a subset of physicians conducted the majority of home visits, with the top 5% (approximately 330 family doctors) accounting for 59% of all such encounters.[52]Approaches emphasize targeted, interdisciplinary models tailored to urban and suburban settings, often involving collaboration with nurses, social workers, and home care services. Innovative practices include physician-led home-based primary care programs in cities like Toronto, Vancouver, Winnipeg, and Victoria, where dedicated teams manage chronic conditions, medication reviews, and preventive care directly in patients' residences to reduce hospital admissions.[64] Safety protocols are standard, such as conducting initial visits with a colleague, carrying communication devices, and assessing environmental risks, as outlined in family medicine training guidelines from institutions like the University of British Columbia.[65] However, training in house calls is not uniformly mandated in family medicine residencies across provinces, contributing to variability in practice adoption.[66]Empirical outcomes highlight efficiency for specific populations; among patients referred to home care in their final year of life, only 5.3% received a visit from their rostered family physician, underscoring a reliance on specialized providers rather than widespread integration.[67] Provincial policies do not impose quotas but incentivize visits through fee-for-service billing codes, though remuneration levels are often cited as insufficient to encourage broader participation compared to office-based consultations.[36] This concentration among a minority of committed practitioners reflects a pragmatic adaptation to resource constraints in Canada's single-payer framework, prioritizing high-need cases over universal availability.[68]
Europe and Developed Nations
In European healthcare systems, home visits by general practitioners (GPs) constitute a core element of primary care, with rates varying widely from 0% to 45% of total consultations across countries. Self-employed GPs conduct more home visits than salaried ones, and frequency is lower in systems where GPs serve as strict gatekeepers to specialist care. These visits primarily target elderly patients, who account for about two-thirds of recipients, often for chronic condition management or end-of-life care. In Germany, for instance, half of home-visited patients require only one visit annually, while nearly 5% need fortnightly or more frequent attention.[69][70][71]Country-specific practices reflect systemic differences and evolving burdens. Swiss GPs average 3.4 home visits weekly, with journeys lasting 11.8 minutes and consultations 23.9 minutes on average, though longer for complex cases. In the Netherlands, short home visits to older adults declined 52% between 2017 and 2023, partly offset by rises in intensive care visits, signaling a shift toward targeted rather than routine domiciliary services. United Kingdom after-hours reforms reduced house calls by 23%, prioritizing telephone triage and walk-in centers to manage demand. German GPs regard home visits as traditional obligations but increasingly burdensome due to time and safety concerns, prompting debates on feasibility amid aging demographics.[72][73][74][75]Beyond Europe, Japan has expanded physician-led home visits to address its super-aged society, surpassing 800,000 monthly visits by 2022, focused on comorbid elderly patients aging in place—over 24 million individuals, many with multiple chronic conditions. Regional disparities persist, with higher utilization in areas like Chugoku-Shikoku (1,030 visits per 100,000 population monthly) versus lower elsewhere, supporting end-of-life and emergency care. In Australia, GP home visits have declined sharply, dropping 51% from 15.8 per 100 persons in 1997 to 7.7 in 2007, reflecting preferences for clinic-based care under Medicare despite coverage availability, with most recipients (60%) being elderly or palliative cases. These patterns underscore logistical trade-offs in developed nations, where home care balances accessibility against efficiency.[76][77][78][79]
Russia and Post-Soviet Contexts
In the Russian healthcare system, house calls—termed выезд врача на дом—are integrated into the polyclinic model of primary care, where physicians from state-funded facilities visit patients unable to travel due to illness, mobility limitations, or severe symptoms such as high fever exceeding 38°C accompanied by weakness. [80] Patients can request these visits via polyclinic hotlines, the Gosuslugi portal, or emergency lines like 122 for non-urgent cases, with services prioritized for children, the elderly, and those with chronic conditions.[81][82] However, the volume remains low; in 2019, registered mobile medical teams across Russia performed 105,000 house calls amid 3.9 million total visits, comprising just 0.51% of outpatient activity, reflecting logistical constraints and a preference for clinic-based care.[83]This practice traces to the Soviet-era polyclinic system, which emphasized comprehensive primary care including domiciliary visits by generalists and specialists to ensure population coverage in urban and rural settings.[84] Post-1991 economic disruptions led to reduced funding and physician shortages, diminishing frequency despite legal mandates for home care in the mandatory medical insurance framework.[85] For elderly patients, who numbered over 37 million in working-age equivalents by recent counts, home medical services are often inadequate, with extended wait times and reliance on family caregivers rather than systematic professional visits, as highlighted in 2013 legislation aimed at expanding but not fully realizing broader domiciliary support.[86] Unmet healthcare needs persist at around 30%, underscoring systemic barriers to accessible house calls.[87]Across post-Soviet states, analogous polyclinic structures inherited from the USSR sustain house calls, though implementation varies by economic development and reform pace. In countries like Ukraine, traditional visits supplement emerging telehealth for rural elderly, addressing isolation where physical access is limited.[88] Central Asian republics and Belarus maintain state-dominated models with sporadic home care, often hampered by underfunding and informal family reliance, while Baltic states have shifted toward Western-style community nursing with reduced emphasis on physician-led domiciliary services.[89][85] Overall, post-Soviet contexts prioritize institutional over home-based care, with eldercare reforms promoting deinstitutionalization but struggling against resource shortages and cultural norms favoring familial responsibility.[90]
Global Perspectives in Developing Regions
In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), physician-led house calls remain rare due to acute shortages of medical professionals, with physician densities often below 1 per 1,000 population in sub-Saharan Africa and parts of South Asia, concentrating doctors in urban centers and leaving rural areas underserved.[91] Instead, home-based care relies heavily on community health workers (CHWs), nurses, and mobile outreach teams to bridge access gaps, as evidenced by World Health Organization initiatives promoting task-shifting to non-physician cadres for universal health coverage.[92] These models prioritize preventive screenings, maternal-child health monitoring, and chronic disease management over curative physician interventions, driven by logistical barriers like poor roads, fuel scarcity, and security risks in remote or conflict-prone areas.In Latin America, Brazil's Family Health Strategy (FHS), implemented since 1994, exemplifies scaled home visitation within primary care, covering over 60% of the population by 2015 through multidisciplinary teams including physicians, nurses, and CHWs who conduct routine household visits at least monthly to assess needs and coordinate care.[93] Physicians participate selectively in these domiciliary visits for complex cases, contributing to reduced hospitalizations and improved equity in underserved regions, though CHWs handle the bulk of routine outreach amid physician workload constraints.[94] Similar mobile primary health teams in other Latin American countries, such as Colombia, deploy for targeted home visits in ethnic and rural communities, enhancing service uptake where fixed clinics are infeasible, but face challenges in sustaining physician involvement due to reimbursement limits and travel demands.[95]Across sub-Saharan Africa, CHW-led home visits predominate, as in rural South Africa where programs since the early 2010s have shown modest gains in maternal caregiving practices—such as improved breastfeeding and hygiene—following structured visits, though direct infanthealth outcomes like growth metrics remain limited without broader systemic supports.[96] Physician home visits are sporadic, often tied to mobile clinics in regions like Niger's Diffa, where outreach since 2020 has boosted vaccination and antenatal careaccess for nomadic populations, but scalability is hindered by funding volatility and clinician shortages, with only 25% of sub-Saharan health facilities equipped for reliable operations.[97]In Asia, India's rural programs emphasize mobile health units over individual physician house calls; for instance, Chhattisgarh's Haat Bazaar clinics, operational since 2018, deliver weekly services to 18 million in remote tribal areas via vehicular teams, reducing travel burdens but substituting for true domiciliary physician care due to infrastructure deficits.[92] Domiciliary treatment in India, often covered under insurance for hospitalized-equivalent home care lasting at least three days, underscores necessity-driven adaptations in urban slums or when facilities are overwhelmed, yet lacks routine preventive physician visits, reflecting broader LMIC patterns where economic incentives favor clinic-based practice.[98] Overall, these approaches yield cost-effective gains in coverage—such as 20-30% increases in preventive service utilization—but underscore causal dependencies on non-physician scaling to address physicianscarcity, with evidence from randomized trials indicating sustained impacts only when integrated with supply-chain and training reinforcements.[99]
Modern Revival and Future Directions
Post-2020 Trends and Drivers
Following the initial disruptions from the COVID-19 pandemic, which caused a 0.76% decline in the U.S. house call market growth from 2020 to 2021 due to infection risks and shifts to telehealth, in-person house calls experienced a revival as healthcare systems adapted to ongoing needs for vulnerable populations.[46] By 2022, surveys indicated that 17% of health leaders were offering hospital-at-home services, a model spurred by pandemic-related hospital bed shortages and emphasizing care delivery in patients' residences.[100] Home-based primary care (HBPC) programs expanded to support over 2 million homebound Americans aged 65 and older by 2025, focusing on aging in place amid rising frailty.[47]Key drivers include demographic shifts, with the aging baby boomer population increasing demand for home-based services; the U.S. Census Bureau projects that by 2030, all baby boomers will be 65 or older, amplifying needs for accessible care. Chronic disease prevalence, affecting over 60% of U.S. adults, further necessitates proactive, location-flexible interventions to manage conditions like diabetes and heart failure outside clinical settings. Patient preferences for aging in place, coupled with evidence that HBPC reduces hospitalizations by up to 60% in high-risk groups, have incentivized providers to prioritize house calls for cost containment under value-based care models.Policy and economic factors accelerated adoption, including Medicare expansions for HBPC and incentives in Medicare Advantage plans, which covered 54% of Medicare beneficiaries by 2024 and emphasized home care to lower expenditures. Technological integrations, such as mobile electronic health records and remote monitoring devices, addressed logistical barriers, enabling scalable house call operations.[101] Procedural volumes in specialized home-based care, like dermatology, surged 125.4% post-pandemic across provider types, reflecting broader shifts toward decentralized delivery.[102] Staffing shortages, however, remain a challenge, with 55% of home-based care leaders citing it as the top issue in 2025, prompting innovations in workforce models.[103] Overall, the U.S. home healthcare market, encompassing house calls, is projected to grow from USD 162.35 billion in 2024 to USD 381.40 billion by 2033 at a compound annual growth rate of 10.2%, driven by these intertwined factors.[104]
Innovations and Integration with Technology
Modern house calls have incorporated portable diagnostic technologies, enabling clinicians to perform advanced assessments at patients' homes without requiring hospital transport. Devices such as handheld ultrasound machines allow for real-time imaging of organs, including the heart, thyroid, and pregnancies, facilitating immediate evaluation of conditions like fluid accumulation or tumors.[105] Mobile X-ray units provide on-site detection of fractures, lung issues, or cardiac abnormalities, as utilized by providers like South Carolina House Calls for efficient diagnostics.[106] Similarly, portable ECG machines and blood analyzers support rapid point-of-care testing for cardiac rhythms, infections, metabolic disorders, and biomarkers such as glucose or cholesterol levels.[107] These tools, often compact and battery-powered, reduce diagnostic delays and improve accuracy in non-clinical settings, with services like New York Home X-ray delivering portable ultrasound to homebound patients since at least the early 2020s.[108]Integration of remote patient monitoring (RPM) systems complements in-person house calls by providing continuous data streams between visits. Wearable devices, including EKG patches, smart socks for mobility tracking, and sensors for heart rate, respiration, skin temperature, and stress, transmit vital signs to clinicians via secure platforms.[106]Artificial intelligence algorithms analyze this data for anomaly detection, such as arrhythmias or early deterioration, alerting physicians to prioritize house calls; for instance, AI-driven RPM has been employed in home health to guide symptom-based testing and reduce costs.[106][109] Post-2020 adoption surged due to pandemic-driven needs, with RPM enabling proactive interventions and decreasing hospital readmissions through real-time insights.[107]Telemedicine hybrids further enhance house calls by allowing seamless coordination with remote specialists and electronic health record (EHR) access. Cloud-based EHRs and mobile apps enable physicians to review patient histories, share live feeds from portable devices, and conduct video-linked consultations during visits, as seen in practices combining on-site labs with telehealth for medication management and psychological assessments.[105][106] Portable centrifuges, which plug into vehicle power sources for on-site blood processing, exemplify efficiency gains, yielding results for cancer markers or infections without lab delays.[105] These integrations, accelerated since 2020, support scalable home-based care models, particularly for chronic conditions, by merging physical presence with digital connectivity to optimize outcomes and resource use.[107]