When life gets busy, and you feel healthy, it’s easy to put off regular doctor visits. Many people wait until they’re sick or injured before seeking care. But having a primary care provider is about much more than treating illness.
“Primary care is about building a long‑term relationship,” says Dr. Adam Christian, a provider at Tidelands Health Family Medicine at Garden City.
Here are four benefits of having a primary care provider:
One of the biggest advantages of primary care is continuity. Over time, your provider learns your medical history, lifestyle, family health risks and individual health needs.
That ongoing relationship allows them to spot changes that might otherwise go unnoticed, such as shifts in memory, mood or overall function.
“When you see the same provider regularly, we’re able to recognize subtle changes that could signal a bigger issue,” Dr. Christian says. “That continuity really matters.”
Primary care focuses on prevention, not just treatment. Your provider can help you stay current on screenings, vaccines and routine exams based on your age, medical history and risk factors.
“You’d be surprised how often I’ve asked a patient to get a specific screening done, and it detected something needing to be addressed,” says Dr. Christian. “The earlier we find something, the better the outcome usually is.”
Primary care is about more than addressing a single symptom at a time. For example, a headache may be related to stress, sleep habits, blood pressure, hydration or medication side effects.
Rather than treating symptoms individually or immediately referring a patient to a specialist, primary care providers consider how different factors may be connected.
“Symptoms are rarely standalone issues,” Dr. Christian says. “In primary care, we look at the whole patient, including their medical history, daily habits, mental health and environment, to understand what’s really going on.”
If you develop symptoms or an illness that requires specialty care, your primary care provider helps guide you to the right specialist and coordinates your care.
In collaboration with MUSC Health, Tidelands Health is the region’s largest health care provider, serving the Carolinas at four hospitals and more than 70 outpatient locations.
“Think of your primary care provider like the quarterback on a football team,” Dr. Christian says. “We start the play and, when needed, hand it off to the right specialist. A patient might come to me with severe stomach issues and ultimately need to see a gastroenterologist for advanced testing, such as a colonoscopy.”
If you don’t have a primary care provider, Tidelands Health makes it easy to get started. Appointments can be scheduled through the My Tidelands Health app or by calling 1‑866‑TIDELANDS.
