Nasr Faysal L MD operates as a family practice physician in Oklahoma City, accepting new adult and pediatric patients and working with most major insurance plans. The practice handles preventive medicine, acute illness management, and chronic disease oversight without requiring referrals for initial care, positioning it as an entry point to the local health system rather than a specialist-only clinic.
The practice provides the core family medicine scope: annual physicals and preventive screenings, treatment of acute infections and injuries, chronic condition management (diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol), immunizations, and minor procedures performed in-office. Most routine visits address conditions that do not require emergency care or hospitalization. The practice does not perform surgery or advanced diagnostic imaging; those needs are referred to specialists or imaging centers.
The practice accepts Medicare, Medicaid, and most commercial insurance plans including Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, and Cigna. Patients without insurance can confirm cash-pay rates directly with the office; typical uninsured preventive visits in Oklahoma City range from $100 to $200, though this varies by practice. New-patient visits generally cost more than follow-ups due to extended history and exam time. Confirm current copay amounts and deductible responsibility with your specific plan before your visit.
Oklahoma City has multiple large health systems (OU Health, Integris, Mercy) with large primary care networks, as well as independent practices like this one. A patient seeking a walk-in urgent visit should use an urgent care center instead. Patients who want a strong ongoing relationship with a single physician and do not mind shorter appointment times often prefer independent practices like this one over large-system clinics. If you need same-day appointments as a routine expectation, a large system with many providers in a clinic may be more reliable. Patients already within the OU Health or Integris systems and unable to switch without losing continuity should stay with their system's network, unless out-of-pocket costs make private practice more affordable under their plan.
This practice suits adults and children with stable or newly diagnosed chronic conditions, patients transitioning to a new doctor and wanting consistent long-term care, and families who prefer one physician for multiple family members. It does not suit patients who need walk-in same-day urgent care, patients seeking cosmetic or elective dermatology services, or patients already enrolled in narrow-network plans that do not include this physician. Patients with complex conditions requiring frequent specialist coordination may find large health systems more efficient, though referrals from this office to specialists are available.
New patients should plan 45 minutes to one hour for the initial appointment. Bring photo ID, insurance card, and a list of current medications or supplements. The physician will take a detailed medical and family history, perform a physical exam, and may order baseline lab work (lipid panel, metabolic panel, urinalysis) depending on age and risk factors. If you have previous medical records from another provider, request they be sent to the office beforehand to speed the process. Following the first visit, follow-up appointments typically run 15 to 30 minutes and focus on the issue at hand or condition monitoring.
The practice is located in Oklahoma City and operates during standard business hours typical of independent family medicine offices (generally 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, with limited weekend hours not confirmed here; call ahead to confirm current hours). Parking details and exact address should be confirmed directly. The office does not accept walk-ins; appointments must be scheduled in advance, typically available within 1 to 2 weeks for routine new patients.
A family medicine practice that accepts new patients while maintaining a limited schedule can provide continuity of care often lost in large clinic settings, but requires more advance planning than urgent care.
