Family & Geriatric Medical Associates operates as a primary care practice in Oklahoma City, focused on serving adults from middle age through their senior years with emphasis on managing chronic conditions, preventive health, and coordination of specialist care.
The practice provides first-contact medical care for established conditions like hypertension, diabetes, and high cholesterol, as well as preventive screenings aligned with age. Because it combines family medicine and geriatric specialization under one roof, older patients and their families avoid the common shuffle of seeing a general practitioner for acute issues and a separate geriatrician for age-related complexity. The geriatric focus means the providers are trained to manage polypharmacy (multiple medications), balance treatment goals against quality of life, and recognize conditions that present atypically in older patients. New patients are typically accepted, though availability depends on provider schedules and patient complexity.
The practice bills standard office visit fees: new-patient comprehensive exams typically run $150 to $250 out-of-pocket (uninsured or cash pay), with established visit follow-ups ranging from $75 to $150. Most major Oklahoma insurers are accepted, including Blue Cross Blue Shield of Oklahoma, Humana, Cigna, and UnitedHealthcare; Medicare is accepted for qualifying patients. Insurance copays for office visits generally fall between $20 and $50, depending on the plan. Verification of specific coverage should be done before the appointment.
Medication management and refill requests are part of routine care. More involved consultations, such as medication reconciliation after a hospital discharge or complex symptom evaluation, may incur higher visit fees. The practice does not typically perform procedures; referrals to specialists or outpatient surgical centers are arranged as needed.
Oklahoma City has several primary care landscapes: large multispecialty health systems (OU Health, Mercy, Integris), smaller independent practices, and urgent-care-adjacent "minute clinics." The key difference with Family & Geriatric Medical Associates is its explicit dual focus on adult medicine and geriatric care, which suits patients over 65 or those managing multiple conditions in middle age better than a general family medicine practice that weights pediatric care equally. If your primary concern is acute illness or a single acute injury, an urgent-care clinic (such as those operated by MedExpress or NextCare across Oklahoma City) is faster and lower-cost; these practices are designed for established, ongoing care. Large systems offer breadth of in-house specialists and same-building lab and imaging; independent geriatric-focused practices like this one trade some convenience for deeper expertise in aging-related medicine and often shorter wait times for established patients.
This practice is strongest for adults over 55 who need ongoing management of chronic disease, preventive care tailored to age, and coordination with specialists. It also serves middle-aged patients whose medical complexity (multiple medications, multiple conditions) benefits from a single provider familiar with their full picture. It does not replace emergency services; those with chest pain, acute neurological symptoms, or severe trauma should go to an emergency department. It is not appropriate for pediatric care. Patients seeking care for a single acute illness without intent to establish ongoing relationship may find urgent care faster.
A new-patient appointment typically lasts 45 minutes to an hour. The provider will review full medical history, current medications (bring the bottles or a complete list), family history, and reason(s) for seeking care. Basic vitals and a physical exam follow. If there is an established diagnosis (such as diabetes), baseline labs may be ordered and drawn on-site or at an affiliated lab. The visit usually includes discussion of preventive care appropriate to age and risk factors, such as cancer screenings, cardiovascular risk assessment, and bone density screening for women. New patients should arrive 10 to 15 minutes early to complete intake forms.
Standard hours are typically Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with occasional extended hours on one or two weekdays; call to verify current schedule. Parking is on-site or nearby. The practice is located in Oklahoma City's central medical quarter, making it accessible from most parts of the city within 15 to 20 minutes during non-rush periods. Appointment lead times for new patients average 2 to 4 weeks; established patients can usually be seen within 1 to 2 weeks for routine visits.
Family & Geriatric Medical Associates fills a specific gap in Oklahoma City's primary care landscape: the need for ongoing, relationship-based care that accounts for the medical realities of aging without forcing patients into either a pediatric-weighted family practice or an impersonal health system model.
