OU Medicine Women's Health is a maternal-fetal medicine practice affiliated with OU Health in Oklahoma City, serving pregnant patients with complex medical conditions, previous pregnancy complications, or advanced maternal age (35 and older) alongside routine obstetric care. The practice operates from the OU Medical Center campus and works within the integrated OU Health system, providing access to the hospital's NICU and perinatology resources.
This is a full-service obstetric and gynecologic practice with a specific emphasis on maternal-fetal medicine (perinatology) and high-risk pregnancy management. The team includes board-certified obstetrician-gynecologists with subspecialty training in maternal-fetal medicine, allowing the practice to manage conditions such as gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, recurrent miscarriage, twin or multiple gestations, and placental abnormalities. The practice also provides routine gynecologic care including annual exams, contraception counseling, and menopausal care. Being part of OU Health means patients have direct integration with OU Medical Center's obstetric units, neonatal intensive care, and maternal medicine specialists without referral delays.
The practice offers prenatal care, management of high-risk pregnancies, ultrasound imaging (including specialized fetal echocardiography), genetic counseling coordination, and delivery services. Routine obstetric care (monthly visits progressing to weekly visits in the third trimester) is billed through standard obstetric care packages, typically ranging from $2,500 to $4,000 for the entire pregnancy episode when uninsured, though this varies by insurance plan and whether complications require additional visits or advanced imaging. Advanced ultrasounds (3D imaging, fetal echocardiography) are priced separately; confirm current charges with the billing department. Insurance-covered patients pay copays or coinsurance based on their plan type and whether the visit is preventive or problem-focused.
Gynecologic services (annual exams, contraceptive management, menopausal hormone therapy) are billed per visit, typically $150 to $300 for established patients without insurance. Genetic counseling, colposcopy, and other diagnostic services carry additional fees and are usually covered by insurance with applicable copay or deductible.
Oklahoma City has two main maternal-care ecosystems. OU Medicine Women's Health specializes in high-risk pregnancy and operates under the OU Health system with institutional access to OU Medical Center's obstetric and neonatal resources. In contrast, many independent obstetricians and small practices in Oklahoma City offer routine obstetric care with referral to OU, Mercy, or Baptist hospitals for delivery; those practices are typically better suited to patients with uncomplicated pregnancies who prioritize continuity with a single provider across multiple locations.
Mercy Women's Center, affiliated with Mercy Hospital Oklahoma City, similarly serves obstetric patients but functions as a traditional hospital-based service where obstetricians divide call responsibility. OU Medicine Women's Health centralizes maternal-fetal specialists in one practice, making it the appropriate choice for patients with pre-existing hypertension, diabetes, prior pregnancy loss, or other conditions requiring subspecialty input. Choose OU Medicine Women's Health if your pregnancy is high-risk or medically complex; choose an independent community obstetrician if you prefer continuity of care with one provider and have a straightforward pregnancy.
This practice is right for pregnant patients over 35, those with pre-existing diabetes or hypertension, anyone with a prior pregnancy loss or fetal abnormality, patients expecting multiples, and those with suspected placental or fetal concerns. It also serves patients seeking advanced imaging or genetic consultation. Gynecologic patients with routine needs (annual exams, contraception) are welcome but may experience longer appointment availability due to the practice's high-risk pregnancy focus.
This practice is not ideal for patients who want a single primary obstetrician to deliver their baby or who prefer minimal institutional involvement; while the practice does manage delivery, patients are delivered by available attending physicians at OU Medical Center, which may not be the obstetrician who conducted prenatal visits. Additionally, patients with uncomplicated, low-risk pregnancies may find wait times longer due to prioritization of high-risk patients.
The first prenatal visit typically includes a detailed obstetric and medical history, physical examination, and standard dating ultrasound. For high-risk patients, the initial visit often includes consultation with a maternal-fetal medicine specialist (not just a general obstetrician), discussion of condition-specific management, and review of testing or monitoring plans. Patients should bring prior medical records, any previous ultrasound images or genetic testing results, and insurance information. The visit typically lasts 45 to 60 minutes. For existing gynecologic patients adding pregnancy care, the intake is shorter unless new risk factors emerge.
OU Medicine Women's Health operates from the OU Medical Center campus in Oklahoma City. Clinic hours are generally Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with some early morning or afternoon slots; verify current hours by calling the clinic directly as they adjust seasonally. The practice does not hold evening or weekend clinic hours. Parking is available in the OU Medical Center main parking structure adjacent to the clinic entrance; initial parking is typically complimentary for patients, though day-rate fees apply to extended parking (confirm current rates with the hospital). Appointments are generally scheduled 2 to 4 weeks in advance for routine visits and sooner for urgent or new high-risk referrals.
OU Medicine Women's Health fills the maternal-fetal medicine gap in Oklahoma City by centralizing subspecialty obstetric care under one integrated system, eliminating the need for separate referrals or transfers when pregnancies turn complex. This practice is essential for pregnant patients whose conditions exceed the scope of community obstetrics.
