Gary B. Grandle, MD operates an independent family medicine practice in Oklahoma City that serves patients from newborns through geriatric care without the constraints of hospital network referral requirements or corporate clinic scheduling. As a solo practitioner in an increasingly consolidated primary care market, Grandle maintains direct control over appointment availability, insurance negotiations, and the depth of time spent with each patient.
Grandle's practice functions as a full-scope family medicine office. It differs fundamentally from urgent care clinics, which handle acute episodes, and from large multispecialty groups, which may require patients to cycle through different providers or wait weeks for appointments. A solo practice allows for continuity: the same physician manages preventive visits, chronic disease monitoring, minor acute care, and referrals to specialists, without administrative layers dictating visit length or follow-up protocol.
The practice handles routine preventive care, management of chronic conditions (hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia), minor acute illness, vaccinations, physical examinations for school and employment, and basic office procedures. It also serves as a first point of contact for any health concern that does not require emergency care or immediate hospitalization.
Grandle accepts Medicare, Medicaid, and most commercial insurance plans. Insurance copays typically range from $15 to $50 for established patients, depending on the plan; new patients should confirm their coverage prior to scheduling. For uninsured patients, cash visit fees generally fall between $100 and $150 for a standard office visit, which is substantially lower than urgent care center charges (typically $150 to $300 for a basic visit in Oklahoma City) and allows for more thorough evaluation than a quick-in, quick-out model.
Extended visits for complex cases or comprehensive preventive exams may incur additional time-based charges; patients should ask the office staff for specifics when booking if they anticipate a longer session.
Grandle's practice operates at the opposite end of the spectrum from large health systems like OU Health and Integris, which dominate primary care volume in Oklahoma City. Those systems offer extensive ancillary services (lab, imaging, same-building specialists) and walk-in urgent care arms but typically route new patients through nurse intake lines, assign providers based on availability, and may transfer care if a patient is referred to a system specialist. Appointment wait times at large networks for new patients can exceed four to six weeks in Oklahoma City.
Urgent care clinics such as MedExpress and Concentra are designed for acute care only (sprains, infections, minor lacerations) and do not maintain longitudinal patient records or manage chronic disease; they refer patients back to a primary care provider for follow-up. They are cheaper for a single problem ($50 to $80 copay in many cases) but cannot replace ongoing family medicine.
In contrast, Grandle's practice emphasizes continuity and unhurried evaluation. The trade-off is that patients cannot walk in; appointments must be scheduled in advance, and serious acute conditions or emergencies still require urgent care or the emergency room.
Grandle's practice is well suited to patients seeking a long-term primary care relationship, those managing multiple chronic conditions, families with children and aging parents, and uninsured patients who benefit from transparent, lower cash-pay pricing. It also works well for patients who value seeing the same physician over time and have the flexibility to schedule appointments in advance.
The practice is not appropriate for patients needing immediate walk-in care for acute illness or injury, patients who require frequent or specialist-heavy care within a single health system, or those seeking evening or weekend availability outside posted office hours.
New patients should bring a photo ID, insurance card, and a list of current medications and allergies. Grandle performs a thorough history and physical, reviews past medical records if available, and establishes a baseline for preventive care (age-appropriate screening, vaccination status, cardiovascular and cancer risk assessment). This first visit typically lasts 45 to 60 minutes, which is markedly longer than the national average of 20 minutes at large practices. The first visit may cost slightly more than a follow-up due to the extra time; confirm the exact charge when scheduling.
Office hours and parking details for this practice change periodically. Contact the office directly at the clinic phone number to confirm current business hours, parking arrangements, and any recent updates to address or services. Most solo practices in Oklahoma City operate Monday through Friday, 8 AM to 5 PM, with limited or no weekend hours.
Grandle's practice remains relevant in Oklahoma City's primary care landscape because it preserves the traditional doctor-patient relationship at a time when consolidation has made that rarer. For patients willing to plan ahead and value depth over convenience, it offers continuity and cost transparency that larger networks cannot replicate.
