Maryland Primary Care Physicians in Glen Burnie: An Independent Practice Accepting New Patients Year-Round
Maryland Primary Care Physicians (MDPCP) operates as an independent, physician-owned practice in Glen Burnie that handles routine family medicine, chronic disease management, and preventive care for patients across all ages without restricting new patient enrollment to specific seasons. The practice sits in Anne Arundel County, a region where most large primary care capacity is embedded within hospital systems like Johns Hopkins and University of Maryland Medical Center, making freestanding practices relatively less common.
What Maryland Primary Care Physicians actually is
MDPCP functions as a traditional ambulatory care office staffed by physicians and nursing staff, not a walk-in clinic or urgent care center. The practice coordinates ongoing care for established patients, manages referrals to specialists, and typically does not provide same-day care for acute problems. It is not affiliated with a hospital health system, which affects both scheduling and how prescriptions and records move to other providers. The practice accepts Medicare, most major commercial insurance plans, and maintains a cash-pay option for uninsured patients.
Services and insurance acceptance
The practice handles routine physicals, management of high blood pressure, diabetes, high cholesterol, and other chronic conditions common in primary care. Vaccinations and preventive screenings (mammography referrals, colonoscopy coordination) fall within the scope. In-office basic lab work and EKGs are available; more complex testing is coordinated through outside vendors or referred to hospital-based facilities.
Medicare is accepted, as are plans from Anthem, Aetna, CareFirst, and Cigna (verify current acceptance with the office, as networks change). Uninsured patients typically pay between $150 and $250 for a new-patient visit, with established-patient visits running $80 to $150 depending on complexity. Many primary care practices in the Glen Burnie and Anne Arundel area charge in a similar range; the meaningful difference here is that MDPCP does not turn away cash-pay patients and maintains an open new-patient policy, whereas practices embedded in hospital systems often close new patients when demand exceeds capacity, sometimes for months.
How it compares to other Glen Burnie primary care options
Glen Burnie is home to several Johns Hopkins Community Physicians offices and University of Maryland Medical Center primary care clinics, both of which accept insurance and walk-in patients but coordinate more directly with their respective hospital emergency departments and specialist networks. Those practices may close to new patients during peak demand periods. Private practices like MDPCP offer continuity with a single physician or small team and typically no affiliate pressure to refer within a hospital system, but they do not have the same back-end infrastructure; if your patient record needs to be sent to a specialist outside the practice's referral relationships, turnaround can take longer.
For patients prioritizing the fastest access to specialists and integrated records, a hospital-affiliated practice is simpler. For patients who value continuity with the same doctor and a practice that welcomes new patients year-round without the scale of a large system, MDPCP fits better.
Who this practice suits and who it does not suit
MDPCP suits patients who need ongoing management of stable chronic conditions, want a consistent doctor, and do not require rapid access to on-site specialists or imaging. It works well for patients comfortable calling ahead for appointments and for those navigating insurance with a practice that is experienced handling out-of-network claims and cash pay.
It does not suit patients seeking immediate same-day urgent care (an ankle sprain, upper respiratory infection) or those who want all their care coordinates through a single electronic health record tied to a hospital system. Patients with complex multisystem disease or those in the middle of cancer treatment or post-surgical recovery may find hospital-affiliated practices more efficient.
What the first visit involves
New patients typically schedule a 30 to 45-minute appointment. The office will ask for insurance information ahead of time or collect it at check-in. The physician takes a history, performs a physical exam, reviews medications, and discusses preventive care (screenings due, vaccinations). Lab work (blood pressure, weight, sometimes basic blood tests) happens on-site or is ordered for later. The visit ends with a plan for follow-up, referrals if needed, and prescription renewals. Bring a list of current medications and any recent test results from other providers.
Hours, parking, and logistics
MDPCP is located in Glen Burnie and maintains standard office hours, typically 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays with limited or no weekend hours (confirm current hours directly). Parking is available on-site. The practice does not have 24-hour or after-hours answering service for emergencies; patients experiencing chest pain, difficulty breathing, or other acute symptoms should go to an emergency department.
Maryland Primary Care Physicians fills a gap for Glen Burnie residents who want primary care outside the hospital system without sacrificing access or insurance flexibility. The practice's year-round new-patient acceptance and cash-pay pathway make it a realistic choice in a region where hospital-affiliated clinics periodically pause enrollment.

