Comprehensive Women's Healthcare — Grapevine, TX
4.9 stars / 603 Google reviews for a mid-cities OB/GYN practice run by a physician who has been delivering babies in the area since the mid-1990s. Comprehensive Women's Healthcare sits on Texan Trail in Grapevine — a Tarrant County suburb wedged between Dallas and Fort Worth that anchors a sizable share of DFW's young-family population — and has built the kind of steady, decades-long patient relationship that does not show up in marketing but does show up in review counts like this one.
Before going further, the question we get from most patients researching this practice: is this a fertility clinic? The short answer is no. It is a general OB/GYN practice that includes an infertility workup in its scope, not a reproductive endocrinology clinic. That distinction shapes everything below. If you are comparing practices across the state more broadly, our fertility clinics in Texas directory lists both REI clinics and community OB/GYNs on one page.
About the Practice
Comprehensive Women's Healthcare is a small, physician-led OB/GYN practice in the Grapevine / Colleyville / Southlake corridor of northeast Tarrant County. The practice is led by Kerry D. Neal, MD, FACOG, who has been practicing obstetrics and gynecology since 1986. Dr. Neal completed medical school at the University of Tennessee, Memphis, and his OB/GYN residency at the University of Tennessee; he served as Chief of OB/GYN at Baylor Medical Center in Irving from 1992 to 1996 and established his Grapevine practice in 2000. He is a Fellow of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (FACOG), licensed in Texas.
The clinical team also includes Barbara A. Buckley, NP, a women's health nurse practitioner who shares a substantial portion of the day-to-day gynecology and follow-up load. Practice materials and patient-facing pages have at times also listed additional clinicians; staffing at community OB/GYN offices changes, so the roster at your first appointment is worth confirming when you book. Patients can verify individual physician board certification through the ABMS Certification Matters tool.
The office is at 1054 Texan Trail, Suite 100, Grapevine, TX 76051, a short drive from Baylor Scott & White Medical Center – Grapevine, which is the practice's primary delivery and surgical hospital.
Services — Routine OB/GYN Plus Fertility Workup
The published scope covers the full span of women's health:
- Obstetrics — prenatal care, labor and delivery at Baylor Scott & White Grapevine, postpartum follow-up
- Gynecology — annual wellness, Pap, pelvic, breast, contraception, STI screening
- Gynecologic surgery — hysteroscopy, laparoscopy, and inpatient procedures at the hospital partner
- Perimenopause and menopause — hormone testing, bioidentical hormone replacement, hormone pellet therapy
- Urinary incontinence — evaluation and in-office treatment options (including InTone)
- Thyroid, weight, and metabolic counseling — with vitamin injections and medical weight management
- Infertility evaluation and initial treatment — diagnostic workup including hormone panels, ovulatory assessment, and coordination of semen analysis
The infertility service here is an evaluation-and-early-treatment scope, not an assisted reproductive technology program. Cycle timing, hormone evaluation, and identification of underlying issues (PCOS, thyroid dysfunction, fibroids, endometriosis) are appropriate first-stop work inside an established OB/GYN relationship.
What This Practice Is — and Isn't
This is the most important section, because the 4.9-star rating will attract patients across the fertility spectrum, and the wrong match wastes months.
Comprehensive Women's Healthcare is a community OB/GYN practice. Its sweet spot is annual wellness, pregnancy, gynecologic surgery, menopause management, and the first stages of a fertility workup — ovulation assessment, hormone panels, timed cycles, and identification of structural issues. For many patients, starting here is exactly the right step.
It is not a reproductive endocrinology practice. The practice does not perform IVF, does not operate an in-house embryology laboratory, does not offer egg freezing or donor eggs, and does not report outcomes to the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology (SART). A board-certified reproductive endocrinologist — an OB/GYN who has completed an additional three-year fellowship in Reproductive Endocrinology & Infertility — is a different specialty with different equipment and scope. Published IUI cycling with monitored stimulation is typically done at an REI clinic in this market.
If you have been trying to conceive for more than 12 months (or 6 months if you are 35 or older), if you have a known diagnosis that requires assisted reproduction (severe male-factor, tubal disease, diminished ovarian reserve, recurrent loss), or if your workup has already pointed toward IVF, your next step is an REI — not a community OB/GYN.
DFW-area REI options to consider alongside Comprehensive Women's Healthcare include:
- Dallas IVF — multi-site REI group with offices including Frisco and a full SART-reporting IVF program
- Fertility Specialists of Texas — a physician-owned REI practice with multiple DFW locations
- CCRM Fertility — Dallas — the Dallas location of a nationally known REI network
Our Texas fertility clinic directory lists the full set of REI clinics and OB/GYNs in the state. Reading IVF outcomes across clinics is its own skill; how to read IVF success rates walks through the three questions that matter before comparing clinic A to clinic B.
Patient Experience — Reading 4.9 / 603
A 4.9 average across 603 Google reviews for a two-clinician OB/GYN practice is an unusually strong signal in its own right. At that review density, the common failure modes of outpatient women's health — long waits, rushed appointments, billing confusion, poor follow-through on results — generally do not dominate, because they would have pulled the average down long before review 600.
For patients in a fertility workup, the emotional texture of the clinical relationship matters alongside technical competence. A practice where the lead physician has been on site for more than two decades tends to offer visit-to-visit continuity that larger groups struggle to match.
Texas's Fertility Insurance Landscape
Texas is not a mandate state. The state does not require insurers to cover IVF, IUI, or fertility preservation. Texas Insurance Code Chapter 1366 contains a narrow "mandate to offer" — insurers offering comprehensive group coverage must make IVF benefits available for group policyholders to add — but no one is required to cover IVF, and self-insured employer plans (which describe most of Texas's large employers) sit under federal ERISA and are not subject to state insurance law at all.
In practice, this means most DFW patients pay out of pocket for assisted reproductive technology, rely on voluntary employer fertility benefits (Carrot, Progyny, Maven, Kindbody), or use a mix of cash-pay and employer benefits. Diagnostic work inside an OB/GYN — office visits, hormone panels, pelvic ultrasound, hysteroscopy — is typically covered under standard medical benefits, which makes a practice like Comprehensive Women's Healthcare a lower-cost entry point before escalating to a dedicated REI clinic if needed.
Our fertility insurance mandates by state guide lays out Texas's narrow mandate-to-offer alongside the full state-by-state picture. For out-of-pocket expectations, IVF cost by state has Texas ranges for diagnostic workup, IUI, and full IVF cycles.
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.
Location and Contact
- Practice: Comprehensive Women's Healthcare
- Address: 1054 Texan Trail, Suite 100, Grapevine, TX 76051
- Phone: (817) 424-3112
- Fax: (817) 439-6839
- Website: grapevineob.com
- Hospital affiliation: Baylor Scott & White Medical Center – Grapevine
- Google: 4.9 stars / 603 reviews (at editorial date)
Confirm current hours at booking; community OB/GYN offices typically offer weekday hours with early-morning obstetric monitoring slots.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Comprehensive Women's Healthcare a fertility clinic?
No. Comprehensive Women's Healthcare is a community OB/GYN practice in Grapevine, TX, led by Dr. Kerry Neal, MD, FACOG. Fertility-related services are limited to an evaluation-and-early-treatment scope — hormone and ovulatory assessment, cycle timing, and identification of structural issues like PCOS, fibroids, or thyroid dysfunction. The practice does not perform IVF, does not operate an embryology laboratory, and does not report outcomes to SART. Patients who need assisted reproductive technology are referred to a board-certified reproductive endocrinologist. Our Texas fertility clinic directory lists DFW-area REI options, including Dallas IVF, Fertility Specialists of Texas, and CCRM Dallas.
Will my insurance cover fertility services in Texas?
Texas does not mandate fertility insurance coverage. State law (Insurance Code Chapter 1366) requires insurers to offer IVF benefits for comprehensive group plans but does not require anyone to cover them, and self-insured employer plans are exempt under federal ERISA. In practice, diagnostic workup at an OB/GYN like Comprehensive Women's Healthcare — office visits, hormone testing, ultrasound, hysteroscopy — is typically covered under standard medical benefits, while IVF and advanced ART at a dedicated REI clinic are most often out-of-pocket or funded through employer fertility benefits (Carrot, Progyny, Maven, Kindbody). Our fertility insurance mandates by state guide explains the Texas mandate-to-offer in context, and IVF cost by state has Texas out-of-pocket ranges.
Where is the practice and which hospital does it use?
The office is at 1054 Texan Trail, Suite 100, Grapevine, TX 76051, with a main line of (817) 424-3112. Obstetric deliveries and gynecologic surgery are performed at Baylor Scott & White Medical Center – Grapevine, the primary hospital partner. Appointment requests and practice updates are posted at grapevineob.com.
Editorial Note
Fertlo editorials are independent. We are not paid by the clinics we cover, and inclusion in our directory does not depend on advertising, partnership, or referral relationships. This review draws on the practice's public-facing website (grapevineob.com), the practice's Google Business Profile, and public information on Texas Insurance Code Chapter 1366. Individual physician board certification should be verified through ABMS Certification Matters; provider rosters, phone routing, and insurance participation at community OB/GYN practices change, so confirm details at time of booking. See our editorial policy for the full methodology.

