Lesa J Mulligan, MD is an obstetrician-gynecologist practicing in Oklahoma City's Midtown corridor, offering both routine gynecological care and prenatal and delivery services. She operates within the established OB/GYN landscape of Oklahoma City, where pregnant people and those seeking reproductive health management can choose between independently practicing physicians, larger clinic networks, and hospital-based programs. This profile clarifies what Mulligan's practice actually covers, how appointment access works, and how it compares to other obstetric care in the city.
Mulligan's practice encompasses routine gynecological exams, contraception counseling and management, menopausal care, and full obstetric services including prenatal care, delivery, and postpartum follow-up. The practice also handles common gynecological concerns such as irregular bleeding, pelvic pain, and routine screening. As an individual practitioner rather than a clinic network, the practice operates on a smaller scale than the obstetric departments at OU Medical Center or Integris Health, where multiple physicians rotate call and deliver babies. This structure can mean more continuity with Mulligan as a single provider but less flexibility if scheduling conflicts arise or if Mulligan is unavailable during your care window.
Most commercial insurance plans accepted at the practice include Blue Cross Blue Shield of Oklahoma, Cigna, Aetna, and United Healthcare. Medicare and Medicaid coverage is available. Confirm your specific plan's coverage before scheduling by contacting the practice directly, as copay and deductible structures vary by plan and plan year. Typical copays for office visits in Oklahoma City OB/GYN practices range from $25 to $50 for established patients, though this varies widely; ask when you book. Obstetric package pricing (prenatal care through delivery and one postpartum visit) is generally bundled rather than billed per visit; expect discussion of out-of-pocket costs related to your specific insurance during a prenatal consultation. Hospital facility fees for delivery accrue separately through the birth facility where delivery occurs, not through Mulligan's office.
New-patient appointments can often be scheduled within two to four weeks, though during peak pregnancy season (late summer and fall) waits may extend longer. The practice accepts walk-ins for established patients with acute gynecological concerns but schedules new patients by appointment only.
Oklahoma City has several models of obstetric care. OU Medical Center's Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology operates a residency training program with multiple attending physicians, resident physicians, and nurse midwives; this structure offers on-site anesthesia, neonatal intensive care, and maternal-fetal medicine specialists, useful for high-risk pregnancies or emergencies. Integris Health operates similar breadth across its women's health program. Private practices like Mulligan's typically excel at continuity and shorter waits for routine care but redirect complex or obstetric emergencies to hospital-based obstetric teams. If you are seeking a single, consistent provider for low-risk pregnancy and gynecology, a solo or small-group private practice suits that goal. If you are managing a complicated pregnancy, multiple pregnancies, or have significant medical history, a larger hospital-based program with specialists on-site may reduce the number of referrals needed.
Mulligan's practice is well-suited for established patients seeking ongoing gynecological management, women planning low-risk pregnancies who value continuity of care, and those with insurance plans commonly accepted in midtown Oklahoma City. Patients in south or northwest Oklahoma City may find farther travel times. Patients expecting delivery at a specific hospital should confirm that Mulligan has active privileges there; this varies and is worth asking directly. Patients with complex medical histories, multiple gestations, or previous obstetric complications should discuss risk assessment during a prenatal consultation to confirm the practice's comfort level with their case; if higher-risk care is needed, Mulligan can refer to maternal-fetal medicine specialists at larger centers.
A new gynecology patient visit typically involves a health and medication history, a pap smear or cervical cancer screening if indicated by age and prior screening, a clinical breast exam, and a pelvic exam. The visit generally runs 30 to 45 minutes. A new obstetric patient (already pregnant) will have an intake history, confirmation of pregnancy dating through ultrasound or prior records, discussion of prenatal testing options (screening for chromosomal abnormalities, genetic testing if relevant), and scheduling of future prenatal visits, typically monthly until 28 weeks, then every two weeks until 36 weeks, then weekly until delivery.
Mulligan's Midtown Oklahoma City office operates during standard business hours, typically 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, with a lunch closure from noon to 1 p.m.; verify current hours by phone before your first visit. Street and lot parking are available in the surrounding area. The practice occupies a mixed-use professional building with other medical and dental offices. Call ahead if you anticipate difficulty with mobility or parking.
Mulligan's combination of individual-provider continuity and established insurance relationships makes her practice a practical choice for Oklahoma City patients wanting straightforward gynecological care or low-risk obstetric management without the scheduling and orientation overhead of larger hospital programs.
