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Atlanta Obstetrics & Gynecology Associates — Fertlo Editorial Review

Independent editorial overview · Atlanta, GA
Photo of Dr. Candela Gallardo

Dr. Candela Gallardo, MD, Specialist in Obstetrics & Gynaecology

10 min read
Medically Reviewed
Photo of Dr. Cristian Jesam

Dr. Cristian Jesam, MD

Reproductive Medicine & IVF Instituto Chileno de Medicina Reproductiva (ICMER), Santiago; Universidad de Chile; SGFertility Chile

Last reviewed:

A practice that has cared for Atlanta women for more than 50 years and maintains a 4.8-star rating across 966 patient reviews has done something rare in American medicine: it has sustained patient trust through multiple generations of providers, patients, and an increasingly competitive metropolitan healthcare market. Atlanta Obstetrics & Gynecology Associates occupies exactly that position in intown Atlanta, operating from two established office locations — Buckhead and Brookhaven — and fielding a clinical team of ten board-certified OB/GYNs and a nurse practitioner.

For patients on a fertility journey in metro Atlanta, this practice represents a meaningful option: a trusted, long-tenured women's health institution with a documented infertility program embedded inside comprehensive obstetric and gynecologic care. It is not a standalone reproductive endocrinology center, but for many patients beginning a fertility evaluation, that distinction may be exactly what they need — and exactly what makes financial and clinical sense in a state with no fertility insurance mandate.

About the Practice

Atlanta Obstetrics & Gynecology Associates has served the Atlanta community since the early 1970s, building a clinical reputation over five decades across the Buckhead and Brookhaven neighborhoods — two of Atlanta's most medically dense corridors. The practice's stated mission is straightforward: "to improve the individual quality of life for the women under our care." The depth of the physician roster reflects that ambition.

The clinical team includes ten physicians and one advanced practice provider, with the overwhelming majority holding board certification through the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (FACOG designation):

  • Jacqui Fisch, MD, FACOG — OB/GYN
  • Mimi Vanoyan, MD, FACOG — OB/GYN
  • Jayasri Bukkapatnam, MD, FACOG — OB/GYN
  • Laura Dopson Almquist, MD, FACOG — OB/GYN
  • Anne Beesley, MD, FACOG — OB/GYN
  • Denise Umpierrez-Morley, MD, FACOG — OB/GYN
  • Lauren Little, MD, FACOG — OB/GYN
  • Julia Samaddar, MD, FACOG — OB/GYN
  • Hayley Scholl, MD, FACOG — OB/GYN
  • Chinyere Ezekwe, MD — OB/GYN
  • Shanda Clayton, DNP, FNP-C — Nurse Practitioner

The practice's patient portal integration with MyChart Piedmont reflects an affiliation with Piedmont Healthcare, one of Georgia's largest health systems — a connection that matters for patients who may eventually need hospital-based procedures or specialist referrals within a coordinated care network.

The Buckhead office is located at 275 Collier Road NW, Suite 100-C, Atlanta, GA 30309. The Brookhaven location sits at 3925 Peachtree Road, Suite 240, Atlanta, GA 30319. Both addresses place the practice at the heart of some of Atlanta's most accessible in-town neighborhoods, well-served by major arterials and convenient to patients across the city's northside.

Infertility Services

Infertility care at Atlanta Obstetrics & Gynecology Associates is woven into the practice's comprehensive women's health model. The team notes that approximately 10% of women of childbearing age encounter infertility — a figure that aligns with CDC population data — and approaches each case with a thorough diagnostic evaluation designed to identify the underlying cause before committing to a treatment plan.

The diagnostic workup includes:

  • Ovulation assessment — home ovulation test kits reviewed in clinical context, serum blood tests measuring reproductive hormones, and pelvic ultrasound to evaluate follicular development and ovarian morphology
  • Structural evaluation — hysterosalpingogram (HSG) to assess tubal patency and uterine cavity contour, and laparoscopy when indicated for direct visualization of pelvic anatomy

The common infertility causes the practice addresses map directly to the conditions the team already manages across its broader gynecology practice:

  • Ovulatory disorders — including polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) and premature ovarian insufficiency, both of which the practice treats with dedicated protocols
  • Fallopian tube pathology — blockage or swelling from prior pelvic inflammatory disease or endometriosis
  • Uterine factors — fibroids and endometriosis that distort the uterine cavity or implantation environment

Treatment options are individualized based on the identified cause, patient age, and personal preferences. The practice offers:

  • Ovulation induction medications — including Clomid (clomiphene citrate) and other agents to stimulate follicle development in patients with anovulatory cycles
  • Surgical correction of structural abnormalities — minimally invasive procedures to address fibroids, endometriosis implants, or tubal factors impeding natural conception
  • Reproductive assistance — up to and including in vitro fertilization (IVF) as a treatment option for patients who do not respond to first-line interventions

The PCOS program at the practice is particularly relevant to fertility patients. The evaluation includes a thorough medical history, physical and pelvic exam, hormone-level blood testing, and pelvic ultrasound to assess ovarian cysts. For patients with PCOS who want to conceive, ovulation-inducing medications such as Clomid are typically the first step; IVF is available for patients who do not achieve pregnancy through medication protocols.

What 4.8 Stars Across 966 Reviews Means in Competitive Atlanta

Atlanta's fertility and OB/GYN market is among the most competitive in the American Southeast. Reproductive Biology Associates (RBA), ACRM, Emory Reproductive Center, and Pinnacle Fertility all operate in the metro, each with dedicated reproductive endocrinologists and purpose-built IVF laboratories. New entrants like Pinnacle Fertility launched in 2024 with explicit pricing-pressure strategies. In this environment, a 4.8-star rating accumulated across nearly 1,000 patient reviews — spanning routine prenatal visits, fertility consultations, surgical cases, and everything in between — is a genuine signal, not a marketing artifact.

Healthcare practices that accumulate review counts in the hundreds typically see their averages drift toward 4.2 or 4.3 as statistical variation surfaces a wider range of experiences. A practice sustaining 4.8 across 966 interactions has consistently executed on patient communication, clinical competence, and the subtler dimensions of care — the follow-up call, the unhurried appointment, the explanation that made a diagnosis comprehensible.

For fertility patients specifically, that consistency carries predictive weight. Infertility care is emotionally taxing, logistically demanding, and often financially stressful. Patients leave practices not primarily because of clinical failures, but because they felt rushed, unheard, or like a billing code rather than a person. A practice with 966 reviews averaging 4.8 in Atlanta — a sophisticated, mobile, review-literate patient population — has demonstrably solved the patient-experience problem at scale. That track record should weigh meaningfully in any fertility patient's decision to make a first appointment.

Georgia's Fertility Insurance Landscape

Georgia does not have a comprehensive fertility insurance mandate requiring private health insurers to cover infertility treatment. Patients in Atlanta cannot assume their employer-sponsored health plan will cover IUI cycles, injectable ovulation medications, or an IVF retrieval — the coverage, if any, depends entirely on the specific terms of their plan.

Two recent legislative developments are worth noting. Governor Brian Kemp signed House Bill 94 in May 2025, which — effective January 1, 2026 — requires state-regulated insurance plans to cover medically necessary fertility preservation procedures (egg, sperm, embryo, and ovarian tissue freezing) for patients with qualifying diagnoses such as cancer, sickle cell disease, or lupus that may cause treatment-induced infertility. A companion measure, HB 428, signed separately and effective July 2025, codifies the legal right to access IVF in Georgia. These are meaningful steps forward, but they stop well short of a full fertility coverage mandate. Patients facing infertility due to unexplained causes, PCOS, age-related decline, or male-factor issues will largely remain without insurance coverage for IUI or standard IVF treatment.

The practical implication for Atlanta patients is significant. Beginning a fertility evaluation at a trusted, long-tenured OB/GYN practice — rather than immediately escalating to a specialty reproductive endocrinology center — is often a financially rational starting point in Georgia. Diagnostic workups, ovulation induction cycles, and initial monitoring at a comprehensive OB/GYN office typically carry a lower cost basis than identical services at a standalone IVF clinic. A thorough evaluation may also reveal a treatable underlying cause — an ovulatory disorder correctable with Clomid, a fibroid amenable to minimally invasive surgery, or an endometriosis diagnosis that can be surgically addressed — before IVF is ever required.

For a state-by-state breakdown of what fertility treatment costs without insurance coverage, see our fertility insurance by state guide and IVF cost by state tracker. For a structured approach to evaluating your options across the Georgia fertility clinic landscape, our guide on how to choose a fertility clinic offers a practical framework for comparing practices on the dimensions that matter most to fertility patients.

Comprehensive Women's Health Under One Roof

Beyond fertility specifically, Atlanta Obstetrics & Gynecology Associates covers the full spectrum of women's health services in ways that are clinically relevant for patients on a fertility journey. The same team managing a fertility evaluation also provides:

  • Prenatal care and delivery — for patients who conceive through treatment, clinical continuity means the transition from infertility management to prenatal care happens with the same physicians and within the same practice infrastructure
  • PCOS and endometriosis management — two of the most common fertility-impairing conditions, managed in-house by the same team rather than requiring a referral outside the practice
  • Minimally invasive surgery — hysteroscopy, laparoscopy, and related procedures to diagnose and treat structural pathology affecting fertility
  • Cancer screening and hereditary risk assessment — including ovarian and breast cancer screening, with hereditary cancer screening available for patients with relevant family histories
  • Menopause management — relevant for patients whose fertility evaluation surfaces premature ovarian insufficiency or diminished ovarian reserve

This clinical breadth within a single, 50-year-old practice is a genuine asset for Atlanta patients navigating a fertility concern. The Buckhead and Brookhaven locations reduce the coordination burden of managing care across multiple specialists in a city where cross-town traffic can make routine appointments genuinely burdensome.

The Bottom Line

Atlanta Obstetrics & Gynecology Associates is one of Atlanta's most established women's health practices — five decades of community-rooted care, ten board-certified OB/GYNs, a documented infertility program spanning diagnostic evaluation through IVF-range treatment, and a 4.8-star track record across nearly 1,000 patient reviews. For Atlanta patients beginning a fertility journey, it represents a high-trust, clinically comprehensive starting point.

In a state without a comprehensive fertility insurance mandate, the financial and clinical logic of beginning that journey at a practice with this depth of experience — and the ability to manage care from first evaluation through delivery — is hard to argue with.

Patients can reach Atlanta Obstetrics & Gynecology Associates at (404) 448-2843, or by visiting atlobgyn.com to schedule a consultation at the Buckhead or Brookhaven office.


Considering At-Home Insemination?

Not every fertility journey begins in a clinic. At-home intracervical insemination (ICI) is a lower-cost, private option that suits patients with no known fertility diagnosis — including single parents by choice, same-sex couples, and people who want to try a few cycles before committing to clinical treatment.

At-home insemination kits like those from MakeAMom come with step-by-step instructions designed for donor or partner sperm. Kits are a one-time purchase that can be reused until conception succeeds, require no clinic visit, and arrive in plain, discreet packaging. Many patients use them as a first step while working toward a fertility consultation — or alongside ovulation tracking while they wait for an appointment slot.

If you have a known fertility diagnosis, have been trying for 12 months without success (six months if you're over 35), or your physician has already recommended IUI or IVF, a board-certified reproductive endocrinologist is the right next step.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Atlanta Obstetrics & Gynecology Associates offer IVF?

Yes — in vitro fertilization is listed among the practice's infertility treatment options. The team also offers ovulation induction medications (including Clomid), surgical correction of structural infertility causes such as fibroids and endometriosis, and comprehensive diagnostic evaluation including hysterosalpingogram and pelvic ultrasound. Patients with complex IVF needs may be co-managed with a reproductive endocrinologist depending on clinical circumstances. See our IVF cost by state tracker for context on what patients in Georgia typically pay for IVF treatment.

Does Georgia insurance cover fertility treatment at Atlanta Obstetrics & Gynecology Associates?

Georgia does not have a comprehensive fertility insurance mandate. Coverage for ovulation induction medications, IUI, and IVF depends entirely on the specific terms of your health plan. As of January 1, 2026, Georgia requires coverage for fertility preservation procedures (egg, sperm, or embryo freezing) for patients with qualifying medical diagnoses — but routine infertility treatment is not mandated for most patients. Contact your insurer directly to confirm your benefits before beginning treatment. Our fertility insurance by state guide provides a full breakdown of what Georgia patients can expect.

How do I start an infertility evaluation at Atlanta Obstetrics & Gynecology Associates?

Call (404) 448-2843 or visit atlobgyn.com to schedule a consultation at the Buckhead office (275 Collier Road NW, Suite 100-C) or the Brookhaven office (3925 Peachtree Road, Suite 240). At the initial visit, your physician will review your medical and reproductive history, conduct a physical and pelvic exam, and order appropriate baseline testing including hormone bloodwork and pelvic ultrasound. The practice tailors its evaluation timeline to patient age — women in their mid-30s or older are typically encouraged to seek evaluation promptly rather than waiting the full one-year standard. From there, the team builds an individualized treatment plan based on your diagnostic findings, age, and treatment preferences.

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