Mudita Malhotra, MD in Baltimore: A Solo Family Practice in Canton
Mudita Malhotra runs a solo family medicine practice in Baltimore's Canton neighborhood, offering primary care for all ages in a model increasingly rare among independent physicians. She accepts most major insurance plans, works with uninsured patients on a cash-pay basis, and sees established and new patients for preventive visits, acute care, and chronic disease management.
What the practice actually offers
Dr. Malhotra's practice is independent rather than hospital-affiliated or part of a larger medical group, which affects how you access it and how care is coordinated. She works alone in a single-provider model, meaning there is no backup physician during her absences and you see the same doctor at every visit unless she refers you elsewhere. For Baltimore patients accustomed to larger practices, this model offers continuity but requires flexibility if she is fully booked or temporarily unavailable.
She provides standard family medicine services: well-child and adult preventive exams, management of common chronic conditions (high blood pressure, diabetes, cholesterol), evaluation of acute illness, routine vaccinations, and referrals to specialists. She does not perform complex procedures (biopsies, minor surgery) in-office, and some Baltimore practices in larger systems may offer wider in-office capability. Routine lab work (blood draws, urinalysis) is ordered through third-party labs or hospital systems rather than performed on-site.
Insurance, costs, and new-patient access
Dr. Malhotra accepts Medicare, Medicaid, and the major commercial plans (CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield, Aetna, UnitedHealthcare, and others). Verify her current panel status and whether she is in-network for your specific plan before scheduling. For uninsured patients, the practice quotes cash-pay rates by visit type; a new-patient comprehensive exam typically runs $150 to $250, and established follow-ups are usually lower, though you should confirm current pricing when calling.
New-patient appointments may have a wait of several weeks during busy seasons, which is average for primary-care practices across Baltimore but longer than urgent-care facilities can offer. If you need same-day or next-day care for an acute problem, an urgent-care center or hospital walk-in clinic is faster.
How to compare to other Baltimore family medicine practices
Baltimore's primary-care landscape includes both independent practitioners and physicians embedded in hospital networks (Johns Hopkins Medicine, University of Maryland Medical Center, MedStar Health). Network-affiliated practices often offer electronic coordination with specialists, same-day appointment slots at affiliated urgent-care centers, and online patient portals managed by the hospital system. The trade-off is that they are busier, appointment waits are often longer, and you may see a different provider each time.
Independent practices like Dr. Malhotra's guarantee continuity of care and typically allow for longer appointment slots, but they require you to manage your own referrals and coordination with specialists. If you value knowing your primary-care doctor well and do not mind scheduling further ahead, an independent practice works. If you prefer to drop in for urgent care and want tight system integration, a large network is more convenient.
University of Maryland Family Medicine near Washington Medical Center and Johns Hopkins Community Physicians at various Canton and Fells Point locations are network alternatives in the same neighborhoods.
Who this practice suits
This practice suits patients who have established health care needs (chronic disease, preventive care ongoing) and can plan ahead because appointments are not same-day. Patients who change doctors frequently or value access to multiple providers in the same practice will find a solo practice limiting. If you live in Canton or East Baltimore and prefer not to drive across the city, location matters; her specific address is worth confirming when you call.
Uninsured patients benefit from direct cash pricing, but be aware that any referrals to specialists or hospitals will involve separate negotiation of costs with those providers. Insured patients should confirm in-network status first.
What a first visit involves
A new-patient appointment includes a full history (past medical and surgical history, medications, family history, lifestyle), physical exam, review of preventive care needs (age-appropriate cancer screening, vaccinations), and discussion of any acute concerns. Expect the visit to last 45 minutes to an hour. You will be asked to bring insurance card, photo ID, and a list of current medications.
Labs (blood pressure, weight, possibly bloodwork if indicated) are done during the visit, and results are sent to you and discussed at a follow-up or by phone. There is no online patient portal for test results to access independently; you coordinate directly with the office.
Hours, location, and parking
Dr. Malhotra's practice is located in Canton. Hours are typically Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., with half-day closures possible during lunch or administrative time; call ahead to confirm current hours and whether she offers early morning or evening slots. Street and paid lot parking is available in Canton, though spaces vary by time of day.
This practice works best for patients who can commit to a single provider and plan appointments in advance, but it also avoids the referral delays and depersonalization of large networks.

