Fruit of the Womb is a naturopathic practice in Oklahoma City that specializes in fertility support, pregnancy care, and postpartum wellness using botanical medicine, nutritional counseling, and clinical herbalism. It occupies a narrow space within Oklahoma City's naturopathic landscape, which lacks the depth of fertility-focused practitioners found in larger metro areas, making it a notable option for patients seeking non-conventional approaches to conception and early maternal health.
The practice operates as a solo naturopathic clinic centered on reproductive health. Services focus on couples and individuals working toward conception, people managing pregnancy alongside conventional obstetric care, and postpartum recovery. The approach integrates botanical medicine, targeted supplementation, hormonal pattern tracking, and dietary modification. The clinic does not perform ultrasounds, blood draws, or other diagnostic imaging; practitioners work collaboratively with obstetricians and midwives rather than replacing them. The clientele tends toward people already skeptical of pharmaceutical hormone therapy or those whose conventional fertility treatments have stalled.
Initial consultations run 90 minutes and cost between $150 and $180 depending on complexity; follow-up visits are typically 45 minutes at $90 to $110. Herbal formulas and supplement recommendations are billed separately and range from $40 to $120 per month depending on the specific protocol. Patients ordering through the clinic's preferred suppliers often pay less than buying identical products at retail; this arrangement is common in naturopathic practice and worth asking about during the first visit. The clinic accepts some insurance plans as out-of-network providers; verify coverage directly before booking because reimbursement varies significantly by plan type and deductible status.
Oklahoma City hosts a handful of general naturopathic practices, but few specialize in fertility. A general practitioner focusing on detoxification or immune support (common offerings at larger wellness clinics) will spend 30 to 40 minutes on an initial visit and charge $120 to $140. Fruit of the Womb's extended first appointment and fertility-specific herb knowledge justify higher per-visit costs for someone actively trying to conceive or managing a pregnancy. For couples unwilling to pursue in vitro fertilization or seeking adjunctive support alongside reproductive endocrinology, the practice fills a real gap. For someone managing a chronic autoimmune condition or seeking general wellness optimization, a general naturopathic clinic may be a better fit and lower-cost entry point. Functional medicine doctors in the area (affiliated with conventional clinics) offer some overlapping services but typically charge $200 to $250 per initial visit and may not specialize in botanical medicine for fertility.
This practice works well for couples or individuals who have been trying to conceive for 6 to 24 months without diagnosis of blocked tubes, severe male factor infertility, or other structural barriers, and who want to optimize egg and sperm quality before pursuing assisted reproduction. It also serves pregnant patients who want to reduce pharmaceutical use for minor complaints (nausea, sleep, ligament pain) or postpartum people managing depression, low milk supply, or recovery energy. Conversely, the practice is not appropriate as a primary obstetric care provider; it cannot manage gestational diabetes, hypertension, or other pregnancy complications. It is also not the right choice for someone with severe male factor infertility or tubal damage, where outcomes hinge on medical intervention rather than herbal support. Skeptics of herbal medicine or people seeking quick symptom relief should look elsewhere.
Expect a detailed 90-minute intake covering menstrual cycle length and regularity, previous contraceptive use, family reproductive history, diet, stress and sleep patterns, and any prior fertility testing or treatments. The practitioner will likely recommend cycle tracking via temperature, cervical mucus observation, or an app, and may order basic bloodwork through an affiliated lab to assess thyroid function, progesterone timing, or ovulatory status. You will leave with a written protocol typically including one or two herbal formulas, a supplement list, and dietary adjustments specific to your cycle phase or pregnancy stage. Bring recent lab results if available, though the clinic can order tests independently.
The clinic operates Tuesday through Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., with evening appointments available Thursday and Friday until 7 p.m. Street parking is available on the surrounding block; no dedicated lot. The practice is small and allows 15 to 20 minutes between appointments, so arriving early helps. Telehealth visits are available for follow-ups; the clinic will confirm your state of residence before offering remote care, as naturopathic regulation varies by state.
Fruit of the Womb fills a specific and underserved role in Oklahoma City, combining the extended time and herbal expertise that mainstream reproductive medicine often lacks with an explicit boundary about when to refer back to conventional care. For someone within its scope, that clarity is more useful than a general wellness clinic's promise to "support fertility naturally."
