Physician Housecalls is a family medicine practice in Oklahoma City that brings primary care to patients' homes, eliminating the need for office visits or clinic waiting rooms. It operates as a concierge model focused on housebound seniors, patients with mobility limitations, and those managing multiple chronic conditions who benefit from care delivered at home.
The practice sends board-certified physicians directly to patients' residences across the Oklahoma City metro area. A nurse practitioner or physician assistant may conduct initial intake, but a licensed physician conducts evaluations, reviews medical history, and orders diagnostics or referrals. The service handles routine exams, medication management, chronic disease monitoring, preventive screenings, and coordination of specialist referrals. This model suits patients who struggle with transportation, have cognitive decline, are bedbound or wheelchair-dependent, or find travel to an office stressful or medically risky.
The practice integrates with the local EHR system where possible to reduce redundant testing and communicate with Oklahoma City-area hospitals and specialists. Patients retain their existing specialists and insurance relationships; housecall physicians act as coordinators rather than replacements.
Housecall physicians charge per visit, with typical costs ranging from $200 to $400 per in-home appointment depending on visit length and complexity. Many Medicare Advantage plans and some traditional Medicare coverage includes these visits with standard copays ($25 to $50), though coverage varies by plan. Private insurance and self-pay rates differ; verify your plan's coverage before booking.
Initial visits last 45 to 60 minutes and include a full health history, physical exam, and medication review. Follow-up visits typically run 20 to 30 minutes. The practice accommodates same-day requests for acute concerns when capacity allows, though scheduled appointments are standard. Routine care usually occurs monthly for stable patients and every two to four weeks for those managing complex conditions.
Prescription refills, lab result reviews, and brief phone consultations are included at no additional charge between visits. If the physician determines a patient needs in-person hospital care or urgent intervention beyond home management, they facilitate emergency transfer and communicate findings to the receiving facility.
A traditional family medicine office in Oklahoma City requires patients to travel during business hours, often with appointment wait times of one to two weeks for non-urgent visits and limited flexibility for patients without reliable transportation. Urgent care clinics handle acute issues but do not provide ongoing primary care or medication management for chronic disease. Home health agencies employ nurses and aides but not physicians; they support ADL assistance and medication administration only, not medical decision-making or diagnosis.
Physician Housecalls suits patients for whom a clinic visit is genuinely difficult (housebound, late-stage dementia, post-operative recovery, multiple comorbidities requiring frequent monitoring). A traditional family practice is more appropriate for ambulatory patients who can schedule routine preventive care and prefer lower per-visit costs through standard insurance copays. Choose urgent care for acute injury or illness outside office hours. Choose home health nursing for ADL or post-operative wound support without the need for physician evaluation.
This service is designed for Medicare beneficiaries age 75 and older, patients with terminal illness or significant functional decline, and those with complex medication profiles or multiple specialist involvement who benefit from unified in-home coordination. It also serves working family caregivers who cannot take time off for office visits or those whose conditions (severe arthritis, advanced Parkinson's disease, post-stroke mobility loss) make transportation genuinely unsafe.
Physician Housecalls is not a fit for ambulatory patients without transportation barriers, those seeking acute urgent care (go to urgent care or ER), or patients requiring ongoing specialist-level care in a hospital or clinic setting. The practice will not suit patients seeking same-day walk-in visits; all appointments are scheduled in advance.
When you schedule, a staff member will ask about current diagnoses, medications, and recent medical events. The physician will call you ahead of the visit to confirm the time and discuss any acute concerns.
At the visit, the physician arrives with a portable blood pressure cuff, pulse oximeter, thermometer, and reflex hammer. You'll answer a detailed health history (often 30 to 40 minutes if this is truly a first visit), and the physician performs a standard physical exam, listening to heart and lungs, checking extremities for swelling or skin breakdown, and assessing mental status. They review all current medications, looking for interactions or doses inappropriate for your age or kidney function. If bloodwork is needed, the physician may arrange a phlebotomist to draw samples at home, with results reported back within a week.
Before leaving, the physician summarizes findings, discusses any medication adjustments, and explains when to call if symptoms worsen. A written summary is sent to any specialists you see.
Physician Housecalls operates Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with limited Saturday availability (call to confirm). Appointments are scheduled by phone; no walk-ins. The practice covers the Oklahoma City metro area and suburbs within a 20-minute drive radius from central Oklahoma City. If you live outside service boundaries, the staff will let you know before booking.
No parking is needed since the physician comes to you. Ensure someone is home to admit the physician or provide door codes/keys in advance.
For current service-area maps or to schedule, contact the practice directly. Medicare coverage verification can be done by phone before your first visit to prevent surprise costs.
Physician Housecalls fills a gap in Oklahoma City primary care by removing transportation as a barrier to medical oversight for patients whose conditions or age make office visits impractical. The per-visit cost reflects the time and logistics of in-home delivery, but Medicare coverage typically makes it accessible for the seniors it's designed to serve.
