Jeremy A. Moore is a general and colorectal surgeon practicing in Oklahoma City who handles both routine and complex surgical cases through community hospitals and outpatient facilities across the metro area.
Moore holds board certification in general surgery and colorectal surgery and operates within the Oklahoma City medical landscape through several established hospital systems. His training includes a colorectal surgery fellowship, which qualifies him for cases ranging from hernia repairs and gallbladder removal to rectal cancer, inflammatory bowel disease surgery, and hemorrhoid treatment. He accepts insurance and works on a referral basis, meaning patients typically access his services through primary care providers, gastroenterologists, or urgent situations routed through emergency departments.
General surgery covers elective procedures (hernias, lipomas, thyroid nodules) and acute cases (appendicitis, acute abdomen). Colorectal surgery includes colonoscopy-related therapeutic procedures, polyp management beyond endoscopy, fistula repair, diverticulitis treatment, and cancer resection. Moore performs both open and minimally invasive laparoscopic approaches where applicable. Laparoscopic surgery typically results in shorter hospital stays and faster recovery than open procedures; many routine hernia and gallbladder cases are now same-day or 23-hour observation.
Surgical costs vary widely by procedure complexity and whether they are performed at an outpatient surgical center or hospital-based operating room. A simple hernia repair at an outpatient center runs $3,000 to $6,000 before insurance; hospital-based colorectal cancer surgery with staging and reconstruction can exceed $25,000 in facility and surgeon fees combined. Moore's practice bills both professional fees (the surgeon's charge) and facility fees separately, so final patient responsibility depends on insurance deductibles and plan details.
Oklahoma City has multiple board-certified colorectal surgeons; choice typically depends on hospital affiliation, availability, and whether your primary care doctor has a preferred referral. Surgeons affiliated with OU Health and Mercy Health OKC (the largest systems serving the metro) tend to have shorter wait times for elective cases because they operate across multiple facilities. Smaller independent surgical groups or surgeons with limited hospital affiliations may have longer scheduling windows but sometimes offer more flexible outpatient consultation timing. Insurance network participation also matters: check your plan's provider directory before booking, as going out-of-network can trigger much higher patient costs.
Moore's practice works well for patients with established primary care relationships in Oklahoma City who can be referred through normal channels, have commercial or Medicare insurance (most surgeons do not accept Medicaid due to low reimbursement), and can wait 2 to 4 weeks for elective surgery. Patients needing emergency colorectal surgery, acute appendicitis, or bowel obstruction should go directly to an emergency department; they will be routed to an on-call surgeon regardless of prior relationship. Patients seeking second opinions on cancer diagnosis or complex inflammatory bowel disease may find value in academic colorectal surgery programs at OU Health, which have tumor boards and specialized IBD multidisciplinary teams.
Referral-based practices begin with your primary care doctor or gastroenterologist sending records and a brief clinical summary. Moore's office or hospital scheduling coordinator will call to confirm insurance and book a consultation. The first appointment is a 30- to 45-minute office visit (sometimes via telemedicine for geographic convenience) where Moore reviews imaging, prior procedures, and symptoms; performs a history and limited exam; and discusses surgical vs. non-surgical options if applicable. He will explain the proposed procedure, recovery timeline, risks (infection, bleeding, anastomotic leak for bowel surgery, recurrence for cancer), and postoperative care. Insurance approval (authorization) is usually obtained during or shortly after this visit before scheduling; lack of authorization can delay surgery.
Moore operates at multiple Oklahoma City surgical facilities; his primary practice location is in the midtown or northwest medical corridors near OU Health or Mercy affiliates. Hours for office consultation are typically Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., though same-day or urgent slots are sometimes available for acute referrals. Parking at hospital-based surgical centers is free. Verify current office location and phone number with your insurer's provider search or by calling your referring physician's office, as surgical practices sometimes consolidate or move within hospital systems. Elective surgery is usually scheduled weeks in advance; emergency cases operate on same-day schedules.
Moore's dual board certification in general and colorectal surgery and his established presence across Oklahoma City's major surgical networks makes him a reliable choice for both routine abdominal surgery and complex lower-GI cases that many community surgeons decline.
