Western Maine has no full-service urgent care centers with regular evening and weekend hours, leaving many residents with few options outside hospital emergency rooms.
For Bethel-area residents and visitors, the nearest walk-in medical care is at least 30 minutes away. After hours and on weekends, local clinics are closed, often forcing patients into more expensive emergency room visits for non-life-threatening illnesses and injuries.

As primary care shortages grow nationwide, urgent care centers have become an increasingly important alternative to emergency rooms. From 2014–2023, the number of urgent care centers in the U.S. increased by almost 100%, from 7,220 in 2014 to 14,382 as of the middle of 2023. A December 2025 Bureau of Health study found the expansion has coincided with a worsening shortage of primary care physicians nationwide, leaving many patients unable to get timely appointments with regular doctors.
A full-service urgent care center generally offers walk-in treatment without appointments, evening and weekend hours, on-site X-rays and lab testing, and care beyond routine primary care. Common treatments include sprains, minor fractures, stitches, infections and dehydration.
But western Maine has few facilities meeting that standard.
Oxford County Commissioner Lisa Keim, a former legislator, said rural Maine hospitals and clinics struggle to recruit physicians because they cannot compete with larger urban health systems.
Keim said some changes to state policies have made it more difficult for hospitals to get paid, affecting their ability to offer competitive salaries and help physicians with student debt.
“Rural Maine is struggling with that,” Keim said.
She said rural providers also face financial pressure because a large share of patients rely on MaineCare reimbursement.
“We don’t have the mix,” she said, referring to the balance between public and private insurance payments.
Keim said nurses and physicians in Oxford County are overwhelmed by growing patient loads and staffing shortages.
“It’s just hard to keep up,” she said.
Her concerns echo recent reporting by the Portland Press Herald and Sun Journal documenting financial strain on Maine hospitals, low reimbursement rates and ongoing difficulty recruiting physicians to rural areas.
OXFORD

Concentra Urgent Care, 1570 Main St., Suite 3, Oxford, offers many urgent care services, including physician staffing, X-rays and expanded diagnostic services, but its weekday-only schedule falls short of what is typically considered full-service urgent care.
The facility is near Ocean State Job Lot in the mall beside Route 26 and is about 39 minutes from Bethel Village.
According to its website, Concentra accepts most insurance plans and offers shorter wait times than hospital emergency rooms.
Services include treatment for sprains, fractures, coughs, colds and flu, as well as occupational medicine, physicals and drug screenings. Staff includes board-certified physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants and medical assistants.
Hours are 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Most visits do not require appointments.
After-hours emergency care is available at Stephens Memorial Hospital, 181 Main St. in Norway.
FARMINGTON

For Rumford residents, the nearest full-service urgent care center is ConvenientMD Urgent Care in Farmington at 108 Knowlton Corner Road, about 44 minutes away. The clinic is open seven days a week from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
According to the receptionist, the clinic offers X-ray services but not MRIs, and, except on Sundays, two physicians are always working on-site. A second physician is available by video on Sundays.
“We strive to keep care affordable for those without insurance,” the receptionist said.
Self-pay services include youth physicals for $65 and adult physicals for $140. Follow-up visits for wound care and sutures performed at ConvenientMD are free. Costs for lab work and immunizations are also outlined in the clinic’s literature.
Keim said urgent care centers help fill a growing gap left by the shortage of primary care providers.
“We need the option of urgent care because people don’t have primary care and that’s better than going to the emergency room,” she said. “But it’s just a stopgap. … It’s highly concerning for many, many residents.”
She said telehealth also has an important role in rural healthcare access.
WALK-IN CARE
While some health centers and express clinics accept walk-in patients, they do not qualify as full urgent care centers because of limited services, restricted access or abbreviated hours.
Bethel
Bethel Family Health Center, 32 Railroad St., offers same-day appointments for established patients but is not open to the general public for walk-in urgent care.
The practice has eight clinicians, including one physician, and limited hours.
Rumford
Swift River Family Medicine, 430 Franklin St., Rumford, similarly limits walk-in access to existing patients. The practice staffs three physicians and one nurse practitioner.
After-hours emergency care is available at Rumford Hospital.
Gorham, New Hampshire
Coos County Family Health Services HealthCare Express, about 30 minutes from Bethel Village but closer to West Bethel and Gilead, functions as an express care clinic rather than a full urgent care center because it does not offer imaging services and may require referrals for some out-of-network patients.
Services include treatment for sprains and strains, bruises, minor cuts, colds, flu, sore throats, stomach illnesses, urinary tract infections, ear infections, pink eye and minor skin conditions. Vaccinations are also available.
Walk-ins are accepted. Patients are treated by an osteopathic physician, physician assistants, nurse practitioners and a podiatrist.
Hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, and 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday.
After-hours emergency care is available at Androscoggin Valley Hospital in Berlin, New Hampshire.
Keim said the state first needs to address reimbursement issues, but added that the healthcare system faces so many challenges it is difficult to point to a single cause.
Keim said many residents are driving to Portland and Boston to receive timely medical care.
“The fortunate ones are the ones who have a family member willing to drive them,” she said.
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