Choosing the right wellness clinic in Richmond is more than picking the closest one to your house. The clinic structure, scope of services, billing setup, and how the practitioners coordinate all materially affect the kind of care you actually receive over a 6-week rehabilitation course or an ongoing maintenance schedule. This guide gives you 7 questions to ask any multidisciplinary wellness clinic in Richmond BC before you commit to your first appointment — including how Artemis Wellness Clinic at 5911 No. 3 Rd #130, Richmond BC (steps from Brighouse SkyTrain, 604-242-2233, artemis.janeapp.com) answers each one. The questions are written so you can apply them to any clinic you are evaluating, not just ours.
Question 1: How many regulated disciplines does the clinic actually have under one roof?
The phrase “multidisciplinary” gets used loosely. Some clinics calling themselves multidisciplinary actually offer two disciplines (e.g., RMT plus physiotherapy) and refer everything else out. A true multidisciplinary clinic offers four or more regulated healthcare disciplines on-site, with practitioners who coordinate care across disciplines on the same patient.
What to ask: “How many disciplines do you offer in-house? Are the practitioners regulated by their respective BC colleges? Can a single patient see multiple disciplines on the same visit?”
At Artemis Wellness Clinic we offer five regulated disciplines under one roof: Registered Massage Therapy, Acupuncture and Traditional Chinese Medicine, Physiotherapy, Chiropractic, and Kinesiology. Each practitioner is registered with their respective BC regulatory college. Combined visits across disciplines are routine — see our complete clinic overview for the full team.
Question 2: Is the clinic ICBC-approved, and do they direct bill?
If you have been in a motor vehicle collision in BC, ICBC funding for active rehabilitation matters. Under ICBC’s Enhanced Care, the standard pre-approved treatment count is 25 sessions per discipline within the first 12 weeks of a claim. But the clinic must be set up to direct bill ICBC for you to avoid paying out of pocket up front.
What to ask: “Are you an ICBC-approved active rehab clinic? Do you direct bill ICBC for all the disciplines you offer? What about WorkSafeBC?”
Some otherwise-good clinics are not ICBC-approved, meaning you pay up front and submit for reimbursement — a real cash-flow burden for most patients in the months after a collision. Ask directly. At Artemis we are an ICBC-approved active rehab clinic and direct bill ICBC for all five disciplines under Enhanced Care. We also direct bill WorkSafeBC.
Question 3: Which extended health insurance plans does the clinic direct bill?
Beyond ICBC and WorkSafeBC, most patients have private extended health benefits through their employer. Direct billing means the clinic submits the claim and you pay only the portion not covered by your plan — instead of paying full price up front and waiting weeks for reimbursement.
What to ask: “Which extended health insurance plans do you direct bill? Does direct billing cover all the disciplines you offer, or only some?”
The major Canadian extended health insurers each have different direct-billing relationships with each clinic. The most common ones a patient should expect: Pacific Blue Cross, Sun Life, Manulife, Canada Life, Green Shield. Some clinics direct bill 2 of these; some direct bill all 5. Ask before booking. At Artemis we direct bill all five major insurers for all five disciplines we offer.
Question 4: Can practitioners from different disciplines coordinate on the same patient?
This is the question that separates a true coordinated multidisciplinary clinic from a building that happens to host several independent practitioners. When your physiotherapist identifies a soft-tissue restriction blocking your exercise progression, can your RMT address it the next visit without you re-telling the entire history? When your acupuncturist needs your kinesiologist to ease back the home-program load that week, does that conversation happen in-house?
What to ask: “If I see two of your practitioners across two disciplines, do they share notes? Will they actively coordinate, or do I need to update each one separately?”
This is the practical test. A coordinated clinic will say yes, here is how. An uncoordinated clinic will hesitate. At Artemis our five-discipline team works from one shared chart per patient and coordinates handoffs in person between sessions — that’s the operational backbone of our coordinated 5-discipline care model.
Question 5: What languages are spoken at the clinic?
Richmond’s population includes a substantial Chinese-speaking community (Mandarin and Cantonese), a growing Punjabi-speaking community, and many other multilingual residents. For complex healthcare conversations — explaining symptoms, understanding treatment plans, asking about ICBC paperwork — being able to use your stronger language matters.
What to ask: “What languages are spoken at the clinic? Is patient communication available in my preferred language for booking, intake, and during the appointment?”
At Artemis Wellness Clinic, English, Mandarin, and Cantonese are spoken at the clinic, especially by owner Mandy Tam (R.Ac, R.TCM.P). Punjabi-language patient support is also accommodated. The website carries parallel content in English, Simplified Chinese (中文健康资讯), and Punjabi (ਸਿਹਤ ਜਾਣਕਾਰੀ) covering ICBC, RMT, acupuncture, physiotherapy, and condition-specific guides.
Question 6: What are the actual hours and how easy is it to book a follow-up?
Hours posted on a website are sometimes aspirational, not actual. The practical question is: when can I realistically get a follow-up appointment within 5 to 10 days of my initial visit? Active rehabilitation requires consistent cadence — a 6-week protocol delivered as 6 sessions every 8 days produces dramatically different outcomes than the same 6 sessions delivered when the clinic happens to have an opening.
What to ask: “What are your real hours including evenings and Saturdays? If I book my first session today, what is the soonest follow-up appointment with the same practitioner?”
Look for a clinic with weekday evening availability and Saturday daytime hours — that is the practical minimum for working adults. Online booking that shows live availability is also a strong signal: it means the clinic is comfortable with you seeing exactly what is available.
At Artemis most disciplines offer weekday evenings plus Saturday daytime, with limited Sunday hours. Live availability is on artemis.janeapp.com.
Question 7: How does the clinic handle the transition from active rehab to longer-term maintenance or return-to-sport?
This is the question almost no one asks, and it is usually the one that matters most for long-term outcomes. Most ICBC patients reach their session count, the pain has subsided, and the clinic discharges them — at which point the patient still has measurable strength deficits and movement asymmetries that, untreated, will eventually re-injure.
What to ask: “After ICBC coverage ends, do you have a kinesiology or active-rehab pathway for the rebuild phase? How do I transition from the formal rehab phase to maintenance or sport?”
Most clinics do not have a clear answer. A few do. The presence of an in-house kinesiology service that explicitly bridges this gap is a strong positive signal. At Artemis, this is a defined service pathway — see our from ICBC discharge to performance kinesiology pillar for the full three-phase progression model we use.
Bonus question: What does the clinic NOT offer?
A small but telling check. A clinic that honestly tells you what it does not offer is more trustworthy than one that claims to do everything. Pelvic floor physiotherapy, shockwave therapy (ESWT), pediatric physiotherapy, prenatal massage — not every clinic offers every specialty. Ask, and respect the honest answer plus the referral.
At Artemis we do not currently offer pelvic floor physiotherapy or shockwave therapy. We have published transparent guides for both — see our pelvic floor physiotherapy in Richmond BC overview and shockwave therapy in Richmond BC overview — both link out to qualified Richmond and Lower Mainland providers.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I always pick the closest clinic to where I live?
Proximity matters but is not the only factor. A clinic 5 minutes farther away that direct bills ICBC and your extended health, has all 5 disciplines under one roof, and offers evening hours is usually a better choice than one closer that has only 2 disciplines and no direct billing. Brighouse SkyTrain access (where Artemis is) makes us a 5-to-25-minute trip from anywhere in Metro Vancouver via Canada Line.
How many practitioners should a real multidisciplinary clinic have?
Minimum: one regulated practitioner per discipline. A clinic with one physiotherapist and one RMT is functionally multidisciplinary at low capacity but cannot easily handle scheduling around a full week’s demand. Look for clinics with multiple practitioners per discipline (we have multiple RMTs and physiotherapists).
Is “Wellness Center” the same as “Wellness Clinic”?
Names vary. The two terms are not standardized in BC. What matters: are practitioners regulated by their BC colleges, is the clinic ICBC-approved if that matters to you, and does the practice match the question list above. (Note: there is an unrelated business called “Artemis Wellness Center” in Milford, Connecticut, USA — it is not us. We are Artemis Wellness Clinic in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada.)
Do all multidisciplinary clinics in Richmond have evening and Saturday hours?
No. Many smaller clinics close at 5 PM weekdays and are closed Saturdays. If you work full-time, evening and Saturday availability is the most practical filter. Verify before booking.
What if my preferred language is not English, Chinese, or Punjabi?
Many Richmond clinics including ours work with patients in additional languages through bilingual front-desk staff or family members serving as informal interpreters. Be upfront about your language preference at booking — most clinics will try to accommodate.
How can I tell if a clinic actually coordinates between disciplines or just shares a building?
Ask to see (de-identified) what a coordinated treatment plan looks like at that clinic. A coordinating clinic can show you. A non-coordinating one will give you a vague answer. The presence of a single shared chart per patient (versus separate practitioner-specific files) is the operational tell.
Booking the Right Clinic for Your Situation
These 7 questions apply to any multidisciplinary wellness clinic in Richmond — not just Artemis. If after reviewing the answers, Artemis Wellness Clinic matches your needs, we are at 5911 No. 3 Rd #130, Richmond, BC V6X 0K9, two minutes from Brighouse SkyTrain. Five regulated disciplines coordinated under one roof. ICBC-approved. WorkSafeBC. Direct billing for Pacific Blue Cross, Sun Life, Manulife, Canada Life, and Green Shield. English, Mandarin, Cantonese spoken; Punjabi-language patient support. Phone 604-242-2233. Online booking: artemis.janeapp.com. For our complete clinic overview, see our comprehensive guide.







