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Direct Primary Care
Family Medicine

Great Indoors DPC

Quick Facts

Membership Price RangeAges 0-14: $50/mo or $550/yr | Ages 15-29: $60/mo or $660/yr | Ages 30-39: $70/mo or $770/yr | Ages 40-59: $80/mo or $880/yr | Ages 60+: $90/mo or $990/yr (prices as of practice closure 6/1/2026; re-enrollment fee $150)
Practice TypeDirect Primary Care
LocationPortland, Beaverton, Hillsboro
DoctorsW. Ward Cuff D.O., Family Medicine
Year Founded2024
Telehealth TypeVideo visits, phone calls
HousecallsYes
Telehealth AvailableYes

About

At Great Indoors DPC, Dr. W. Ward Cuff built a family medicine practice around a simple conviction: human health deserves genuine exploration. He opened the Portland, Oregon practice in October 2024, drawing on his background in fee-for-service primary care and a philosophy rooted in biopsychosocial and socioecological models of well-being.

Dr. Cuff envisioned the practice as a community health resource. He offered care across all ages, with clinical focus on cardiometabolic health, chronic pain, mental health, cancer risk reduction, and trauma-informed care. The practice featured telehealth, house calls, point-of-care ultrasound, and group visits for patients with shared health needs. Dr. Cuff also curated patient education tools and encouraged members to bring a health partner to appointments. Great Indoors DPC closed on June 1, 2026, after just over twelve months in operation. Dr. Cuff transitioned fully to corrections medicine, where he found his skills and life experience a stronger fit.

Details

Address

5201 SW Westgate Dr, Building B, Suite 100, Portland, OR

Membership Details

Age-based tiered monthly or annual membership pricing. First-time enrollment requires 3-month term and prepayment. Renewal options: monthly, every 3 months, every 6 months, or annually. Re-enrollment fee of $150 applies. Shared membership fee discount available for close family members or friends. Ages 0-14 require parent/guardian membership. One-time consult visit available at $300-$550 (no longer available).

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Frequently Asked Questions

No. Great Indoors DPC stopped accepting new enrollment and closed its doors to all patients on June 1, 2026. Dr. Cuff announced the closure in October 2025 and transitioned fully to corrections medicine.

Great Indoors DPC used age-based monthly pricing. Monthly fees ranged from $50 per month for ages 0 to 14 up to $90 per month for ages 60 and older. Annual prepayment options were also available at lower effective rates. First-time members paid upfront for a three-month term to enroll.

Yes. Under federal legislation effective January 1, 2026, patients could use FSA and HSA funds for DPC membership costs. Oregon legislation passed the same date also allowed DPC costs to count toward most health insurance deductibles, excluding Kaiser plans.

Great Indoors DPC operated outside the insurance billing system. The practice did not bill insurance for membership fees or services. Patients paid directly through the membership model. The practice recommended that members also carry a health insurance or sharing plan for hospitalizations and specialist care.

Membership covered a broad scope of primary care, including wellness and preventive care, physical exams, laboratory testing, imaging coordination, specialist referrals, comprehensive medication management, mental health support, chronic pain support, geriatrics support, and trauma-informed care. Some point-of-care ultrasound exams were available at no additional charge.

Yes. Great Indoors DPC offered in-clinic visits, video appointments, phone consultations, and house calls. Dr. Cuff determined house call appropriateness on a case-by-case basis. All patients needed to be physically located in Oregon to receive care.

Yes, the practice served patients of all ages, including children. Children ages 0 to 14 required a parent or guardian who also held an active membership.

Yes. Great Indoors DPC offered a shared membership fee discount for two patients who were close friends or family members. The practice framed this as an incentive to support mutual commitment to one another's health.

Dr. Cuff built the practice around direct access, longer visits, and a whole-person approach to health. He incorporated group visits, curated patient education resources, and encouraged patients to bring health partners to appointments. He envisioned the practice as a community health resource, not just a clinical office.

Practice last updated April 10, 2026