Meet Dr. Brian Bost, MD, MPH

I’m a physician who believes patients deserve a doctor who stays involved — not just during illness, but through every stage of care.

Why I Created B2 Direct Care

I created B2 Direct Care after years of watching patients struggle to navigate care — not because medicine lacked expertise, but because it lacked continuity.

Whether someone is recovering from a hospitalization or simply trying to make sense of everyday health decisions, too often there is no single physician guiding the bigger picture.

My goal is to restore continuity — to remain a physician presence beyond discharge, helping patients make sense of their care, coordinate next steps, and move forward with confidence.

Through direct access, telemedicine, home visits, and care navigation, I work with patients who want a more personal and coordinated approach to their health.

At its core, this practice exists to make medicine human again.

My commitment is simple: to ensure no patient feels unseen, unheard, or alone in the system meant to heal them.

I’m a dual board-certified physician in Internal Medicine and Pediatrics, and I’ve spent more than fifteen years caring for patients in hospitals across Colorado, Montana, and beyond — as well as in global settings from Haiti and Kenya to South Africa.

What Shaped How I Practice

Before medicine, I learned the meaning of service in a small, family-run Italian restaurant, where food, care, and community were inseparable. That experience shaped how I see healthcare to this day: health is never just clinical — it’s personal, contextual, and deeply human.

As a hospitalist, I’ve cared for patients at some of the most vulnerable moments of their lives — admissions, crises, discharges, and recoveries. Across emergency departments, inpatient wards, and public health programs, I saw the same pattern repeat: patients were treated well in the hospital, but often left alone to navigate what came next.

I’ve also been a patient myself. As a medical student, I experienced firsthand the vulnerability of being hospitalized — and the difference it makes when someone truly listens, explains, and stays present. That experience never left me

My role is simple: to be present, to listen, and to help people feel less alone as they navigate their health.