Oklahoma Surgery & Urology Center operates as a surgical facility focused on urology and general surgery cases in Oklahoma City, housed in a dedicated outpatient environment separate from a hospital system. It performs procedures including urological surgeries, hernia repairs, and general surgical interventions on an ambulatory basis, serving patients who need surgery but not hospital admission.
The facility functions as an ambulatory surgical center (ASC), meaning patients arrive, have surgery under sedation or general anesthesia, and typically leave the same day. Unlike hospital operating rooms, ASCs in Oklahoma are licensed and regulated by the State Department of Health to perform lower-risk, shorter-duration procedures. Oklahoma Surgery & Urology Center specializes in urology—prostate, bladder, and kidney cases—alongside general surgery referrals. The center does not handle emergency trauma or overnight admission; it is appointment-based only.
Urology procedures at an ambulatory center typically cost less than hospital-based surgery because overhead is lower. Common procedures include cystoscopy, ureteroscopy for kidney stones, transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP), vasectomy, and nephrectomy. Out-of-pocket cost varies sharply by insurance and procedure complexity; verify pricing directly with the center's billing department, as facility fees, surgeon fees, and anesthesia are billed separately. Patients with insurance should request an estimate from their plan before scheduling. Uninsured patients may find quoted rates 30 to 50 percent lower at an ASC than at a hospital facility for the same procedure, though exact figures change by case.
Oklahoma City has three primary hospital systems with surgical services: OU Medical Center (a 460-bed academic medical center with extensive urology residency training), Integris Health (multi-facility system with surgical suites across the metro), and Mercy (Catholic system with OR capacity). Each offers inpatient and outpatient surgery. An ambulatory surgical center like Oklahoma Surgery & Urology Center is best for patients undergoing routine urology or general surgery who are healthy enough for same-day discharge. Choose a hospital facility if the procedure is complex, likely to involve complications, requires overnight monitoring, or if your surgeon operates primarily there. The advantage of an ASC is shorter wait times for elective procedures and lower facility fees; the advantage of a hospital is immediate availability of intensive care if unexpected complications arise.
This center suits adults with diagnosed urological conditions requiring surgery—kidney stones, benign prostate enlargement, bladder dysfunction—who are medically stable and cleared for outpatient anesthesia. Patients undergoing vasectomy, minor urological biopsies, or hernia repair in good overall health are appropriate candidates. It is not suitable for emergency cases, patients with serious cardiac or pulmonary disease, those requiring post-operative nursing care, or anyone whose surgeon does not have privileges at the center. Patients with multiple comorbidities, those over age 80 unless cleared, or those with complex urological malignancy typically benefit from hospital-based facilities where intensive support is on-site.
Schedule a pre-operative consultation with the surgeon, during which your medical history, medications, allergies, and previous anesthesia experiences are documented. You will receive printed pre-operative instructions: typically nothing to eat or drink after midnight the night before, stop certain medications (especially blood thinners), and arrange transportation because you cannot drive after anesthesia. Arrive 90 minutes before your scheduled procedure for check-in, vital signs, and final anesthesia review with the anesthesiologist. After surgery, you spend 1 to 2 hours in recovery, then are discharged with post-operative care instructions and a responsible adult. Plan for someone to stay with you the rest of the day.
Verify current hours by phone, as surgical facilities adjust schedules seasonally and by surgeon availability. Parking at the facility is complimentary and located on-site. The center is not accessible by public transit; you must arrange private transportation or rideshare both to and from surgery, since you will be sedated.
Oklahoma Surgery & Urology Center fills a practical gap for patients whose urological needs fit the outpatient model; it is not a replacement for emergency care or complex hospital surgery, but for routine elective urological cases, it typically reduces cost and wait time compared to hospital facilities.
