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Women's Health Specialists — Fertlo Editorial Review

Independent editorial overview · Murfreesboro, TN
Photo of Prof. Jane Harries

Prof. Jane Harries, PhD, MPH, MPhil

6 min read
Medically Reviewed
Photo of Prof. Sandro C. Esteves

Prof. Sandro C. Esteves, MD, PhD

Male Infertility & Andrology ANDROFERT Andrology & Human Reproduction Clinic, Campinas, Brazil; Honorary Professor, Aarhus University, Denmark

Last reviewed:

Women's Health Specialists (Murfreesboro, TN): An All-Female OB/GYN Practice With a Fertility-Focused Approach

When patients in Rutherford County need gynecological care that genuinely listens, Women's Health Specialists, PLLC has been a consistent answer since 1999. Located at 1800 Medical Center Parkway in Murfreesboro — roughly 30 miles southeast of downtown Nashville — this practice holds a 4.5-star rating across 1,713 verified reviews, a volume that carries real statistical weight. Collecting that many reviews over decades in a mid-sized Tennessee market means the rating reflects sustained performance, not a lucky stretch of satisfied patients.

The Practice at a Glance

Women's Health Specialists describes itself as the first all-female OB/GYN practice serving Middle Tennessee. The seven-physician group is composed entirely of board-certified female OBGYNs: Kimberly McGowan, M.D., Dana Jones, M.D., Sovana Moore, M.D., Mary Adams, M.D., Cynthia Wear, M.D., Brittney Brothers, M.D., and Jennifer Bell, M.D. Each provider brings the full scope of obstetrics and gynecology — prenatal care through delivery, minimally invasive surgery, menopause management, and, critically for fertility-focused patients, evaluation and treatment of conditions that compromise conception.

The all-female model is not incidental. For patients navigating sensitive diagnoses — infertility workups, PCOS, endometriosis — discussing those conditions with a female physician can meaningfully reduce the barrier to seeking care.

Fertility Services: What the Practice Offers

Women's Health Specialists is not a standalone reproductive endocrinology clinic, but it functions as an important first-line fertility resource for many Middle Tennessee patients. The practice has documented experience managing several conditions that directly affect fertility:

Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS): PCOS is among the most common causes of anovulatory infertility, and the team at WHSTN provides individualized care plans that factor in a patient's age, symptom severity, and pregnancy goals. Treatment options span lifestyle intervention (dietary changes and weight management), hormonal therapies, and — when conception is the goal — ovulation-promoting medications and referral pathways for in vitro fertilization. The practice uses ultrasound imaging and hormonal blood panels to confirm PCOS diagnoses before initiating treatment, recognizing that overlapping symptom profiles require precise differentiation.

Endometriosis: The physicians diagnose and treat endometriosis, which affects up to 10 percent of reproductive-age women and accounts for a significant share of unexplained infertility. Surgical management via the da Vinci robotic surgery system is available in-house.

Minimally Invasive Surgery: The da Vinci platform enables precise laparoscopic work — hysterectomy, myomectomy, excision of endometrial tissue — that can restore conditions favorable to pregnancy. Patients can access robotic-assisted surgery without traveling to a Nashville tertiary center.

Obstetric Monitoring: For patients who achieve pregnancy, the practice provides full obstetric coverage including 3D ultrasound, prenatal care, and delivery. Continuity from fertility workup through delivery with the same physician group is a meaningful differentiator.

For patients who require full reproductive endocrinology services — IUI cycles, egg retrieval, or embryo transfer — Women's Health Specialists can direct them to Nashville Fertility Center, which operates a satellite location less than a mile away on Medical Center Parkway.

What 4.5 Stars Across 1,713 Reviews Actually Means

In the OB/GYN category, review counts above 1,000 are uncommon for a single-location community practice. A 4.5-star average at that volume outweighs a perfect score built on far fewer responses. Patient comments frequently highlight Dr. Jones for attentiveness and Dr. Brothers for follow-through — a pattern across hundreds of reviews that reflects practice-wide culture, not isolated outliers. Staff are consistently described as unhurried and caring, qualities that matter most when patients arrive with complicated histories around fertility.

Hours are Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Evening and weekend availability does not appear to be offered.

Tennessee's insurance landscape for fertility treatment changed materially in 2025. Governor Bill Lee signed the Fertility Treatment and Contraceptive Protection Act (House Bill 533) on April 24, 2025, effective July 1, 2025. The law requires health plans — including TennCare — to cover fertility diagnostics, treatment, and preservation, with IVF benefits spanning at least three oocyte retrievals and unlimited embryo transfers; waiting periods are prohibited.

This is a meaningful shift from Tennessee's prior status as a state with no fertility insurance mandate. However, self-funded ERISA employer plans are governed by federal law and may opt out of state mandates. Always verify specific plan benefits directly with your insurer or HR department before scheduling treatment.

For a detailed state-by-state breakdown of what is and is not covered where you live, see our guide to fertility insurance by state. And for a broader look at IVF pricing across Tennessee and comparable markets, the IVF cost by state resource can help you benchmark what an out-of-pocket cycle is likely to run.

The Murfreesboro-Nashville Fertility Corridor

Murfreesboro's Medical Center Parkway has become a de facto fertility corridor for Nashville's southeastern suburbs. Rutherford County's rapid population growth has driven sustained demand for women's health services, and Women's Health Specialists sits at the center of that ecosystem as one of the region's longest-established OB/GYN anchors.

Patients weighing broader regional options can consult our Tennessee fertility clinics directory. For guidance on when to start with a community OB/GYN versus going directly to a reproductive endocrinologist, see our editorial on how to choose a fertility clinic.

Bottom Line

Women's Health Specialists, PLLC is a mature, well-reviewed all-female OB/GYN practice with genuine fertility capabilities for PCOS, endometriosis, and ovulation disorders. Its 1,713-review record at 4.5 stars reflects sustained clinical quality over more than two decades. It is not a full-service IVF center, but for patients whose fertility challenges intersect with gynecological conditions — or who want diagnostic workup before engaging a reproductive endocrinologist — it is one of the strongest starting points in Middle Tennessee.

Contact the practice at (615) 907-2040 or visit whstn.com.


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 Women's Health Specialists in Murfreesboro offer IVF?

The practice offers fertility-related care for conditions such as PCOS and endometriosis, including ovulation-promoting medications and referrals for IVF. Full IVF services — egg retrieval, embryo transfer, and laboratory procedures — are provided by dedicated reproductive endocrinology practices. Nashville Fertility Center operates a Murfreesboro location less than a mile away on Medical Center Parkway and handles complex assisted reproductive technology cases that require specialist-level protocols.

Is fertility treatment covered by insurance in Tennessee?

Yes, since July 1, 2025, Tennessee's Fertility Treatment and Contraceptive Protection Act requires most health plans to cover fertility diagnostics, treatment, and preservation — including at least three IVF cycles with unlimited embryo transfers. That said, self-funded employer plans governed by federal ERISA law may not be subject to the state mandate. Always confirm your specific benefits with your insurer before scheduling treatment. Our fertility insurance by state guide provides a current breakdown.

How does the all-female physician model affect fertility consultations?

Many patients, particularly those dealing with sensitive reproductive health concerns or prior experiences of feeling dismissed by providers, report greater comfort discussing cycle irregularities, conception struggles, and PCOS symptoms with female physicians. Research on patient-provider gender concordance in OB/GYN suggests it can improve disclosure and follow-through on care recommendations. At Women's Health Specialists, all seven physicians are female OBGYNs, so patients have continuity of that dynamic regardless of which provider they see on a given visit.

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