

Dollar General Takes Another Step to Expand Its Health Care Offerings
For the second time in less than two years, the huge retail chain is expanding its health care focus. It plans to pilot mobile clinics at three of its Tennessee stores in a partnership with , a provider of mobile medical services in 26 states and in the United Kingdom.
As initiatives go, this may seem like a small move. The clinics that are hosted in large vans in store parking lots provide basic, preventive, urgent care and chronic condition-management services along with lab testing. The DocGo pilot may expand to other DG stores depending on customer feedback.
Albert Wu, M.D., DG鈥檚 chief medical officer, said in a that the mobile clinics are part of the discount chain鈥檚 strategy to bring more affordable health and wellness services to its customers, particularly in rural areas, while establishing the company as a trusted partner in providing health services. at-home urgent care provides services including annual physicals, acute illness and urgent and wound care visits, vaccinations and diagnostics like EKGs.
The mobile clinics, which will accept Medicare, Medicaid and select insurance plans, will serve as a front door to meet the needs of patients in rural areas, who often face challenges when trying to access convenient, close-to-home care. It鈥檚 similar to the approach the retailer took in July 2021 when it launched its and to that taken by with its locations. At the time, Wu said DG planned to establish itself as a 鈥渉ealth care destination.鈥
In that initiative, DG expanded its retail space for health care products and services by about 30% and offered 400 more items compared with standard stores. DG Wellbeing is now available in about 3,200 of DG鈥檚 more than 18,000 stores.
The question going forward is: How significantly will DG expand its on-site care delivery offerings?