Make an Appointment
If you wish to schedule your appointment, please call (561)-748-2488 during regular business hours.
The office is open Monday through Friday from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. The office is located at Bermudiana 431 University Boulevard, Jupiter, Florida 33458
To prepare for your FIRST visit, please go to FORMS on the top navigation menu and download the following three forms HIPPA, Patient Information (0) and Patient Information (1) for your FIRST visit appointment. You may want to review them before your visit.
To facilitate your payment and billing process, please bring your insurance card to each visit. If we are not contracted with your insurance plan, or if you are not insured, please be prepared to pay at the time of service. An estimate of costs can be provided when you schedule an appointment.
For your convenience we accept Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discovery and personal checks. We strive to keep health care costs down by eliminating financial processing and billing expenses.
For this reason:
- Please be prepared to pay your bill at the time of service
- Please be prepared to pay your co-payment and deductible at the time of service
- For services not covered by your plan, please be prepared to pay at the time of service.
If you are unable to pay for a service at the time it is provided, our accounts representative will discuss possible billing arrangements before your appointment.
Please read a welcome statement from Julie Wells our office manager:
As we enter the 21st century the nature of the patient-physician relationship appears to be far more complex than ever before. The sweeping changes within and outside the health care sector-such as the growing preponderance of chronic illnesses, new medical technologies, shifting reimbursement practices, the Internet, government regulations, rising costs and changing social norms-are constantly molding patient and physician relationship.
Amid the changes, one of the clearest themes to emerge is patient involvement in critical medical decisions. Increasingly, they are not simply recipients of care or subjects of research but active, informed individuals who wish to know more about their condition and exert greater control over their own care.
The effective patient-physician relationship creates a mutual understanding of the patient's expectations of the physician as well as the physician's expectations of the patient; which includes patient's financial responsibility.
Finally, open communication is the basis of a trustworthy patient-physician relationship for navigating the stressful circumstances that accompany acute medical illnesses. It creates a strong basis for discussing options to achieve expected goals of care and the ultimate framework for maintaining an open discussion particularly when there is uncertainty about the medical outcome of an illness.
We will like to welcome you to our practice.
Julie Wells
Manager
