Stephen B. Mooney, MD — An Honest Editorial Review
Among fertility clinics in Ohio, most of the state's reproductive endocrinology infrastructure sits in Cleveland, Columbus, and Cincinnati — which leaves patients in Stark County and the greater Canton-Akron region choosing between a long drive and a local option. MOONEY MD LLC, led by Dr. Stephen B. Mooney, is that local option. The office is at 2520 Wales Avenue NW, Suite 220, Massillon, OH 44646, roughly eight miles west of Canton.
This is a small, physician-led reproductive endocrinology and infertility practice — not a large academic center. Dr. Mooney is fellowship-trained in reproductive endocrinology and infertility and has been in practice in northeast Ohio for more than two decades.
Training and Credentials
Dr. Stephen B. Mooney earned his MD from Northeast Ohio Medical University (NEOMED) and completed his OB/GYN residency at Summa Health System / NEOMED in Akron (1995–1999). He then completed a fellowship in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility at Summa Health System–Akron City Hospital (1999–2002). He is board-certified in Obstetrics and Gynecology by the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
Hospital affiliations include Aultman Hospital, Cleveland Clinic Akron General, Summa Health System, Western Reserve Hospital, and Cleveland Clinic. Dr. Mooney has contributed to the peer-reviewed literature on IVF and fertility management; browse his PubMed publications, which include work on hysteroscopy timing before controlled ovarian hyperstimulation and management of failed oocyte retrieval.
Services and Specialties
Services listed by the practice include:
- Fertility evaluation and diagnostic workup
- Intrauterine insemination (IUI) and ovulation induction
- In vitro fertilization (IVF) and assisted reproductive technologies
- Preimplantation genetic testing (PGT-A, PGT-M, PGT-SR)
- Egg freezing and fertility preservation (oocyte, sperm, and embryo cryopreservation)
- Recurrent pregnancy loss evaluation
- Minimally invasive reproductive surgery — hysteroscopy, laparoscopy
- Male-factor fertility evaluation
- LGBTQ+ fertility care, including donor egg and donor sperm cycles
Success Rates and Lab Quality
When comparing IVF programs, the most honest apples-to-apples source is the SART Clinic Summary Report and the CDC ART national report. Raw averages blend very different ages and diagnoses — always compare within your own age band and with attention to single-embryo transfer rates. Our how to read IVF success rates guide covers common interpretation traps. If reporting status matters to you, ask the office directly whether cycles are reported to SART and which embryology lab performs their work.
Patient Experience
MOONEY MD holds a 5.0 Google rating across 17 reviews at the time of writing — a small sample, but uniformly positive. Recurring themes in public feedback point to direct physician access (patients typically see Dr. Mooney himself rather than a rotating roster), unhurried consultations, and straightforward explanations of diagnostic results. The small-practice model means scheduling flexibility is tighter than at a large academic center, so patients who need a cycle started quickly should call early.
Considering At-Home Insemination?
Not every fertility journey needs to begin with IVF or clinical IUI. At-home intracervical insemination (ICI) is a lower-cost, private option that makes sense for patients with no known fertility diagnosis — including same-sex couples, single parents by choice, and couples who want to try a few cycles before scheduling a specialist consult.
At-home insemination kits from MakeAMom come with step-by-step instructions designed for donor or partner sperm. Kits are a one-time purchase, reusable until conception, and ship in plain, discreet packaging. Many patients in rural and smaller-metro regions — where REI appointment wait times can stretch into months — use home cycles in parallel with an initial workup.
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 like Dr. Mooney is the right next step.
Insurance and Cost in Ohio
Ohio does not mandate fertility or IVF coverage. That means most commercial plans in the state treat IVF as an out-of-pocket expense unless your employer has specifically elected to add a fertility benefit (more common among large employers and some federal/university plans). Diagnostic workup — labs, ultrasound, HSG, semen analysis — is often covered under standard medical benefits even when treatment is not. See our fertility insurance mandates by state guide and IVF cost by state breakdown for Ohio-specific pricing ranges. Verify benefits directly with the office before your first consult.
Location and Contact
Address: 2520 Wales Avenue NW, Suite 220, Massillon, OH 44646 Phone: (330) 576-5761 Website: drmooneyfertility.com
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Dr. Mooney a reproductive endocrinologist or a general OB/GYN? Dr. Mooney is fellowship-trained in reproductive endocrinology and infertility (Summa Health System, 1999–2002) and practices as an REI. He is board-certified in Obstetrics and Gynecology.
Does MOONEY MD perform IVF? Yes. The practice offers IVF, IUI, PGT-A/PGT-M/PGT-SR, and fertility preservation. Ask the office directly for details about their embryology lab and SART reporting status before committing to a cycle.
Is fertility treatment covered by insurance in Ohio? Ohio does not mandate fertility or IVF coverage, so coverage depends entirely on your specific employer's plan. Diagnostic workup is more commonly covered than treatment. Verify benefits before your first visit.
Editorial note: Independently written by the Fertlo editorial team; not sponsored. See our editorial policy.

