Dr. Geo A. Cheek is an internal medicine physician practicing in Nichols Hills, the upscale residential suburb immediately north of Oklahoma City's central business district. This is one-on-one primary care: adult patients building ongoing relationships with a single doctor rather than rotating through clinic staff, which matters for continuity of treatment and medication review over years.
An internist with a private practice focus means Cheek handles preventive medicine, chronic disease management, and initial diagnosis for conditions that don't require immediate emergency care. Internal medicine doctors manage hypertension, diabetes, high cholesterol, thyroid disorders, and infections. They also coordinate referrals to specialists when needed. Private practice differs from larger clinic networks in that appointment scheduling is typically tighter and there's no front-desk queue system for walk-in urgent issues; a patient either has a scheduled slot or calls for urgent openings the same day.
New patients to a private internal medicine practice usually call to schedule an intake appointment, which runs longer than follow-ups (typically 45 minutes to an hour) and involves a medical history review, medication reconciliation, and initial physical exam. Insurance acceptance varies by provider; confirm coverage before scheduling, as private practices sometimes contract with specific plans and not others. Medicare is standard for practices serving Oklahoma City's aging population.
Large clinic networks such as those within Integris or Mercy hospital systems in Oklahoma City offer extended hours and multiple locations, but appointment lead times often exceed two weeks and patients see different doctors across visits. Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) throughout Oklahoma City, including on the north side, charge on a sliding-fee scale regardless of insurance, making them accessible for uninsured patients, but they also operate on high volume and shorter appointment windows. Private practices like Cheek's trade after-hours availability for consistency: the same doctor at each visit, more unhurried time during appointments, and faster scheduling for established patients needing urgent follow-up. For new patients wanting quick first appointments, clinic networks may win; for those prioritizing continuity and personalized attention, a private physician typically delivers.
This setup suits adults with established health needs (ongoing management of chronic conditions) and those who value stability in their medical relationship. It works well for patients with comprehensive insurance coverage, since private practices are less able to absorb uninsured or underinsured populations. It does not suit people without insurance seeking low-cost primary care; those need FQHCs. It also does not work for those unable to secure appointments weeks in advance, since private practices depend on scheduled slots. Patients expecting 24-hour urgent care access at the practice location should instead use Oklahoma City's dedicated urgent-care centers.
Arrive 10 to 15 minutes early with your insurance card, government ID, and a list of current medications or their bottles. The office will collect demographic and insurance information, verify coverage, and review past medical history. The doctor will conduct a physical exam and order baseline lab work if this is a new-to-doctor patient in his 50s or older or if you have significant medical history. Expect to discuss preventive screenings (colonoscopy, cardiovascular risk assessment) and set goals for the year ahead. This is also the time to raise chronic concerns that have gone unaddressed in the past.
Nichols Hills offices typically maintain standard business hours (8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday) with a break for lunch; confirm the exact schedule by phone before your first visit, as private practices sometimes adjust seasonally or close for physician education days. Parking is street or lot parking at the office building; no validation required. Nichols Hills proximity to Oklahoma City's central corridor makes the location accessible from most of the metro area in 10 to 20 minutes depending on traffic.
Dr. Cheek's practice fills a traditional role in Oklahoma City's medical landscape: the personal physician who knows your history and adjusts care over time, a relationship many patients prize and some can no longer find in large-system clinics.
