A recent survey report looked at healthcare use among children and teenagers in the United States. It specifically asked whether young people aged 17 and under had visited an urgent care center or a clinic located in a drug store or grocery store during the previous 12 months. The survey aimed to understand how families use these types of convenient medical services.
The report did not publish the actual findings from the survey. It did not share any numbers, percentages, or data about how many children actually visited these clinics. There is no information about safety concerns, different reasons for visits, or how this care compares to seeing a regular doctor.
This means readers should be very careful with this information. Since no results were reported, this survey cannot tell us anything about how often children use urgent care or if this is a growing trend. It is simply a report that a survey was conducted.
What you should know is that this survey exists, but its findings are not available. It does not provide evidence to change how you seek care for your child. For making healthcare decisions, it's always best to talk with your child's doctor about the most appropriate place for treatment.