Get n Fit is a physician-supervised weight loss center focused on medication-assisted weight management and behavioral support for adults in Oklahoma City looking for an alternative to nationwide chains or hospital-based bariatric programs.
Get n Fit operates as an independent medical weight loss practice, not part of a hospital system or large chain. The center emphasizes GLP-1 medications (such as semaglutide and tirzepatide) alongside nutrition counseling and monthly check-ins. It serves patients who have either tried diet-and-exercise-only approaches or prefer pharmacological support from the start, without requiring bariatric surgery consultation or pre-surgery workups.
Get n Fit charges an initial consultation fee (typically $150 to $200, verify current rate) and a monthly management fee of approximately $200 to $250 depending on the medication prescribed. This management fee includes the office visit, medication supply, and basic lab work to monitor liver and kidney function. GLP-1 medications themselves are billed separately through pharmacy insurance; copays range from $25 to $100 per month if covered, or $300 to $500 out-of-pocket per month if not. The center accepts most major insurance plans but does not handle prior-authorization paperwork. Patients responsible for appeals.
The practice does not offer surgical bariatric options, injections like Kybella, or IV vitamin therapy. It also does not provide meal replacement bars or proprietary supplement lines; nutrition guidance is generic printouts and brief counselor notes, not weekly meal planning.
Oklahoma City has three main weight loss pathways. Hospital-affiliated bariatric centers (tied to OU Health or Integris) offer lap-band, gastric bypass, and sleeve gastrectomy with pre- and post-op support, but require a six-month supervised diet phase before surgery approval and charge $15,000 to $25,000 out-of-pocket after insurance. These suit patients with BMI over 35 or significant comorbidities who want permanent anatomical change.
National chains like Noom and Weight Watchers operate mostly online; Noom charges $60 per month for app-based coaching, and WW runs $20 to $45 per month depending on plan. Both rely on calorie tracking and group support, not physician oversight or prescription medication. Choose these if you prefer self-directed tracking and community, and do not have medical conditions requiring doctor approval.
Get n Fit sits between: faster results than diet-only apps, lower overall cost than surgery, and direct doctor oversight without hospital affiliation or surgical recovery. The trade-off is that results depend on medication compliance and that stopping the medication often leads to weight regain within months.
Get n Fit works best for adults with a BMI of 27 to 35, stable kidney and liver function, and motivation to combine medication with behavior change. Patients must also tolerate gastrointestinal side effects (nausea, constipation, appetite loss are normal early on). It also suits busy professionals who prefer monthly visits and phone follow-up over weekly in-person group meetings.
Get n Fit is not appropriate for patients with a personal or family history of thyroid cancer, pancreatitis, severe kidney disease, or diabetic ketoacidosis. It does not accept Medicaid (verify, as this can change). It is not suitable for anyone seeking permanent weight loss after weight regain from a previous diet, because the program has no mechanism to adjust or escalate care beyond medication adjustment. Patients expecting weekly meal planning or intensive counseling will find the offering limited.
New patients book an initial 30-minute consultation (allow 45 minutes for check-in). The provider takes a weight and medical history, reviews current medications, and asks about previous weight loss attempts and barriers. Basic lab work (fasting glucose, lipid panel, thyroid, liver and kidney function) is ordered that day, and results are reviewed at a follow-up call within one week. At that call, the provider prescribes a starting dose of GLP-1 (usually the lowest, e.g., 0.25 mg semaglutide weekly) if labs are normal. Patients are given a packet on injection technique and side-effect expectations. First refill and check-in occur one month later.
Get n Fit operates Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., with limited evening hours (one provider-dependent evening slot per week; confirm). The practice is located in a small office suite in northwest Oklahoma City without a dedicated lot; street parking or shared lot parking applies (arrive 10 minutes early). No telehealth for first visit; follow-ups can be phone-based. Most insurance verification is done at the front desk, but prior-authorization denials are the patient's responsibility to appeal.
Get n Fit fills a practical gap for Oklahoma City residents who want physician-supervised weight loss without bariatric surgery or pricey national programs, and its month-to-month structure means no long-term contract lock.
