PeakMD operates a virtual internal medicine practice serving Oklahoma City residents through video consultations, offering diagnosis and management of chronic conditions, preventive care, and acute illness without requiring an office visit or navigating a multi-week scheduling backlog.
PeakMD is a direct-primary-care telehealth provider focused on internal medicine. The practice conducts all visits by video from a patient's home or workplace and handles conditions including hypertension, diabetes, high cholesterol, thyroid disorders, upper respiratory infections, and urinary tract infections. It does not provide emergency care or complex procedures; patients experiencing chest pain, severe shortness of breath, or symptoms requiring imaging or lab work beyond basic blood tests need the ER or an urgent care center. The business operates independently and is not affiliated with a hospital system.
PeakMD charges a per-visit fee rather than a monthly membership. Standard video consultations with an internal medicine provider cost $75 to $99, depending on visit length and complexity. Follow-up visits for existing conditions fall at the lower end. First-time consultations with detailed history-taking typically run toward the higher range. Prescription refills handled during a call do not incur a separate charge if done within a recent visit window. Most major insurances are accepted, though patients should verify coverage before booking; out-of-pocket costs are substantially lower than urgent care ($150 to $300) or an ER visit ($500 to $2,000 before imaging or labs).
Medication prescribed by PeakMD providers is sent to a patient's pharmacy of choice. Lab work ordered during a telehealth visit must be completed in person at a testing facility; PeakMD does not operate its own lab network, so Oklahoma City patients typically use Quest Diagnostics or LabCorp locations for draws.
Traditional internal medicine practices in Oklahoma City typically require 2 to 4 weeks for a new-patient appointment and mandate office visits. Providers affiliated with Integris Health or Mercy offer in-person continuity and access to hospital systems but involve copays ($25 to $40) plus office overhead charges. Urgent care centers such as MedExpress or NextCare are faster for acute problems but less suited to ongoing management of chronic disease; they discourage established patients from returning for follow-ups and charge $150 to $300 per visit with no assumption of long-term care coordination.
PeakMD fills the gap for patients needing quick access to an internal medicine provider for routine or chronic-disease management without urgent-care pricing or appointment delays. It suits someone managing diabetes or hypertension who needs a medication adjustment within days, not weeks. For a patient requiring annual preventive exams with physical examination or any in-person diagnostic test, a traditional primary care office remains necessary; telehealth is not a replacement.
PeakMD is practical for Oklahoma City residents with established diagnoses needing medication refills, dose adjustments, or management of stable chronic illness. It works for patients who prefer avoiding office waiting rooms or commuting to appointments. It serves people with flexible schedules who can take a call during business hours.
PeakMD is not appropriate for patients without a recent, documented diagnosis of their condition (they need a provider to examine and assess them first), those requiring physical examination (listening to lungs, palpating the abdomen, checking reflexes), or individuals in need of same-day or 24-hour access (telehealth slots typically fill within one to three business days, not hours). It is not a substitute for emergency care.
A patient schedules a video appointment through the PeakMD website or app, providing basic demographic and insurance information. At the appointment time, the provider logs in via video call. The first consultation includes a review of medical history, current medications, and the reason for the visit. The provider may ask for recent lab results or imaging reports from previous providers. If the problem requires in-person evaluation or testing the provider cannot order remotely, the visit ends with a referral to an urgent care or primary care office. For eligible acute conditions (cough, sore throat, urinary symptoms) or chronic-disease adjustments, the provider diagnoses and prescribes during the call.
PeakMD operates appointments Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Central Time. Weekend and after-hours slots are not available. A patient receives a video link by email or app notification 15 minutes before the scheduled time. No parking or travel is required. Internet connectivity and a private space for the call are the only logistics. A smartphone, tablet, or computer works equally well.
PeakMD serves Oklahoma City residents within Oklahoma and accepts out-of-state patients in states where it holds a medical license; confirm state eligibility on the website before booking.
PeakMD fills a real operational gap in Oklahoma City primary care, where multiple-week waits and unnecessary office visits waste time for routine chronic-disease management. It is best used as a complement to, not a replacement for, a full-scope primary care physician.
