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UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE PHYSICIANS, INC. — Fertlo Editorial Review

Independent editorial overview · Louisville, KY
Photo of Dr. Hrishikesh Pai

Dr. Hrishikesh Pai, MD (Gold Medalist), FRCOG (Hon. UK), MSc, FCPS, FICOG

7 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:

University of Louisville Physicians — UofL Center for Reproductive Medicine — An Honest Editorial Review

For Kentucky patients comparing fertility clinics in Kentucky — particularly those who want academic-medical-center care with a fellowship-trained reproductive endocrinologist — the fertility division of University of Louisville Physicians, Inc. is one of the Commonwealth's longest-standing REI programs. The umbrella practice, University of Louisville Physicians, is the multi-specialty physician group of UofL Health, the academic medical system affiliated with the University of Louisville School of Medicine. This editorial focuses specifically on the fertility sub-practice — the UofL Physicians Fertility Center within the Division of Reproductive Endocrinology & Infertility — rather than the broader group's 80+ specialties.

About the Practice

University of Louisville Physicians, Inc. is the faculty physician group practice of UofL Health. It encompasses more than a dozen clinical specialties — obstetrics and gynecology, cardiology, oncology, urogynecology, and many others — staffed by faculty who also teach residents and fellows at the UofL School of Medicine. The Division of Reproductive Endocrinology & Infertility within the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Women's Health houses the fertility program and the ACGME-accredited REI fellowship.

Kelly Pagidas, MD, FACOG, FRCSC, serves as Professor and Division/Fellowship Program Director for Reproductive Endocrinology & Infertility. Dr. Pagidas earned her medical degree at McGill University Faculty of Medicine and is double-board-certified by the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology in both Obstetrics and Gynecology and the subspecialty of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility. She has served as an ACOG Fellow and has published peer-reviewed research on ovarian reserve, ovulatory function, and unexplained infertility.

Because academic REI rosters rotate as fellows graduate and faculty move between institutions, prospective patients should confirm the current attending list directly with UofL Physicians or on the UofL Health website before scheduling. Fellow-level trainees rotate through the practice as part of the accredited fellowship; attending REIs supervise all clinical care.

Services Offered

Through the UofL Physicians Fertility Center, patients have access to:

  • Comprehensive diagnostic workup (AMH, antral follicle count, HSG, saline sonogram, semen analysis, genetic carrier screening)
  • Ovulation induction and intrauterine insemination (IUI)
  • In vitro fertilization (IVF) with or without ICSI
  • Preimplantation genetic testing (PGT-A and PGT-M)
  • Oocyte cryopreservation (egg freezing) for medical and elective indications
  • Donor-egg and donor-sperm cycles
  • Frozen embryo transfer (FET) with various endometrial preparation protocols
  • Fertility preservation for oncology patients, coordinated with UofL Health's cancer services
  • Surgical reproductive care (hysteroscopy, operative laparoscopy, myomectomy) through the broader UofL Physicians OB/GYN network
  • Care for LGBTQ+ family-building, including reciprocal IVF and donor gamete protocols

Specific on-site lab capabilities, current cycle volumes, and service availability should be confirmed at consultation.

What This Practice Is

The UofL Physicians Fertility Center is an academic, fellowship-training REI program — not a private boutique clinic. The structural implications matter for patients. Academic programs typically offer:

  • Fellowship-trained faculty attendings, with fellows-in-training participating under supervision
  • A research-informed clinical culture — faculty contribute to peer-reviewed literature and teach
  • Coordination with a full academic medical system (UofL Health) for complex medical comorbidities, oncofertility, and multidisciplinary care
  • Continuity of protocols reviewed by faculty peers rather than set by a single physician

Trade-offs also come with the model: appointment availability can be influenced by teaching schedules, and continuity with one specific physician across every monitoring day is not guaranteed the way it is at a two-physician private practice. For patients with complex medical histories, recurrent loss, or oncofertility needs, the academic setting is often the better fit. Prospective patients should also verify current SART membership and CDC ART reporting status when they call — academic programs typically participate, but membership status should be confirmed rather than assumed from this editorial.

Kentucky Insurance Context

Kentucky is not a fertility-coverage-mandate state. There is no statute requiring commercial health insurers in Kentucky to cover IVF, IUI, or diagnostic fertility workup, which means most IVF patients in the Commonwealth pay out of pocket or rely on employer-sponsored fertility benefits provided voluntarily (through programs like Progyny, Carrot, or Maven) by larger employers.

Diagnostic workup — hormone labs, semen analysis, HSG, ultrasound — is often covered under standard gynecology benefits even when IVF is not. Employees of UofL Health itself and other large Louisville-area employers sometimes have fertility benefits worth asking about. For a full state-by-state breakdown, see our guide to fertility insurance mandates by state.

Patient Experience

The 4.8/603 Google rating attached to the University of Louisville Physicians, Inc. directory record is an aggregate across the entire multi-specialty physician group — cardiology, OB/GYN, urogynecology, orthopedics, and every other UofL Physicians specialty — not a rating specific to the fertility practice. High aggregate ratings for large academic physician groups are common and reflect institution-wide satisfaction rather than REI-specific experience. Prospective fertility patients should look for reviews tied specifically to the fertility center or to individual REI physicians, which typically appear on Google, Healthgrades, FertilityIQ, and Yelp under the fertility location or physician name rather than the parent group.

As with any large academic practice, individual experiences vary based on which attending physician a patient sees, which fellow is on their cycle, and the complexity of their case. Reading recent patient reviews filtered to the fertility center specifically — not the parent group — is the most useful signal.

Considering At-Home Insemination?

Not every fertility journey starts in a clinic. For patients without a known fertility diagnosis — particularly single parents by choice, LGBTQ+ couples, and patients who want to try a few cycles before scheduling an REI consult — at-home intracervical insemination (ICI) is a lower-cost, private first step. MakeAMom kits are a one-time purchase, reusable until conception, and ship in plain, discreet packaging. They pair well with basic preconception health work through a primary-care or OB/GYN provider.

At-home insemination is not a substitute for REI evaluation if you have a known fertility diagnosis, have been trying 12 months without success (six months if over 35), or a physician has recommended IVF.

When to Consult UofL Center for Reproductive Medicine

Consider booking with UofL Physicians' REI division if you:

  • Want academic-medical-center fertility care within the Commonwealth of Kentucky
  • Have a complex medical history (cancer history, endocrine disorders, autoimmune disease) that benefits from coordination with a full academic medical system
  • Need oncofertility / urgent fertility preservation before cancer treatment
  • Have had two or more pregnancy losses
  • Have PCOS, endometriosis, or diminished ovarian reserve and need a fellowship-trained REI
  • Need PGT-A, PGT-M, donor gamete, or gestational-carrier cycles
  • Prefer a university-based program over a private single-physician practice

Our how to read IVF success rates guide and the CDC ART National Summary are useful before any first REI visit.

Location and Contact

UofL Physicians Fertility Center Address: 6420 Dutchmans Parkway, Suite 190, Louisville, KY 40205 (Springs Medical Center) — confirm current suite/location when scheduling Phone: (502) 588-7660 (fertility) or (502) 588-4400 (UofL Physicians OB/GYN main) Parent practice: University of Louisville Physicians, Inc. (the faculty physician group of UofL Health) Website: uoflhealth.org Department: UofL Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Women's Health

Frequently Asked Questions

Is "University of Louisville Physicians, Inc." the same as the UofL Fertility Center? Not exactly. University of Louisville Physicians, Inc. is the large multi-specialty faculty physician group of UofL Health — more than a dozen specialties across many locations. The fertility program is one specific sub-practice within the Division of Reproductive Endocrinology & Infertility in the OB/GYN department. When you book a fertility appointment, you are seeing REI faculty within that division, not the parent group as a whole.

Does Kentucky insurance cover IVF at UofL? Kentucky has no state IVF mandate, so coverage depends entirely on your specific plan and employer benefits. Diagnostic workup is often covered under standard gynecology benefits; IVF frequently is not. The UofL Physicians billing team can run a benefits verification before you schedule a stim cycle.

Is UofL's fertility program a SART member and CDC ART reporter? Academic REI programs with active IVF cycles typically are, but membership status changes over time and was not independently re-verified for this editorial. Confirm directly with the fertility center or by searching the SART Clinic Summary Report tool before assuming reported outcome data is available.

Is UofL Physicians' fertility division accepting new patients? Typically yes, but wait times for initial consultations at academic REI programs can run several weeks. Confirm availability when you call.


Editorial note: Independently written by the Fertlo editorial team; not sponsored. The sister directory entry university-of-louisville-physicians-inc-louisville-ky-2 (identical 4.8/603 rating) appears to be a database duplicate and has been flagged for cleanup — this editorial is the canonical record. See our editorial policy.

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