Compare 79 pulmonologists in Omaha, NE. Check ratings, insurance, and availability.
79
Pulmonologists
100%
Accepting patients
78%
Most common: MD
Ranked by Clarity Score, based on profile detail, verification, and patient activity.
Omaha is quietly one of the strongest healthcare cities in the Midwest, with two medical schools, a nationally recognized biocontainment unit at UNMC, and a children's hospital that draws patients from across the Great Plains. Nebraska Medicine and CHI Health Creighton compete for the metro's patients, and Methodist rounds out the market with strong community hospital coverage.
Omaha has 79 pulmonologists. The most common credential is MD (78%). 100% are currently accepting new patients. Practitioners see patients in neighborhoods including Old Market, Dundee, Benson, and Blackstone District.
The UNMC and Nebraska Medicine campus sits in central Omaha along Saddle Creek Road, with the Fred and Pamela Buffett Cancer Center and Children's Hospital nearby. CHI Health Creighton University Medical Center is downtown near the Old Market. Methodist Health's campuses cover the western suburbs. Omaha's grid layout and manageable traffic keep most healthcare trips under 20 minutes. The I-80 and I-680 corridors connect the major medical centers.
Nearby hospitals include Nebraska Medicine, CHI Health Creighton University Medical Center, and Children's Hospital & Medical Center. Local training programs run through University of Nebraska Medical Center and Creighton University School of Medicine. UNMC is home to the National Quarantine Unit and played a key role in treating Ebola patients in the US.
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Nebraska leads the commercial market. Nebraska's Medicaid program, Heritage Health, runs managed care through Nebraska Total Care (Centene), Healthy Blue (Anthem), and UnitedHealthcare Community Plan. Employer plans lean toward BCBS, UnitedHealthcare, and Medica. Both major health systems accept most plans. 77% accept Medicare.
The first visit includes a review of your symptoms, smoking history, environmental exposures, and current medications. The pulmonologist will listen to your lungs and may order pulmonary function tests (PFTs), which measure how well your lungs move air and exchange oxygen. PFTs involve breathing into a mouthpiece in various patterns. You may also need imaging or a bronchoscopy depending on your symptoms.
Nebraska Medicine and CHI Health Creighton both have large primary care networks. New patient appointments typically schedule within one to two weeks. Bring your insurance card and be prepared for electronic check-in at most offices.
See a pulmonologist for a chronic cough lasting more than eight weeks, shortness of breath that worsens over time, COPD management, severe or hard-to-control asthma, recurrent pneumonia, abnormal chest imaging (nodules, masses, scarring), coughing up blood, occupational lung exposures (asbestos, silica), or sleep-disordered breathing that a sleep study has confirmed.
Office visit copay: $30-75 · Pulmonary function test: $150-500 · Chest CT: $300-3,000 · Bronchoscopy: $1,500-5,000
Severe allergy seasons driven by grass, ragweed, and mold run from spring through late fall. Tornado season adds a layer of weather-related anxiety and occasional injury during the summer months.
Pulmonologists manage moderate to severe asthma, perform pulmonary function testing, and develop treatment plans that reduce flares and keep your airways open.
COPD is a progressive lung condition most commonly caused by smoking. Pulmonologists prescribe inhalers, pulmonary rehabilitation, and oxygen therapy to slow progression and improve quality of life.
Loud snoring, gasping during sleep, and daytime exhaustion may indicate obstructive sleep apnea. Pulmonologists order sleep studies and manage CPAP therapy or other treatments.
A cough that lasts more than eight weeks has a cause, whether it is acid reflux, postnasal drip, asthma, or something else. Pulmonologists work through the differential to find and treat it.
Pulmonary fibrosis and other interstitial lung diseases cause progressive scarring of the lungs. Pulmonologists manage these complex conditions with medication and monitoring to slow disease progression.
Omaha, NE has 79 licensed pulmonologists. 100% are currently accepting new patients, so finding an available provider should be straightforward.
Yes. 100% of pulmonologists in Omaha, NE are currently accepting new patients. You can filter your search on FindClarity to show only providers who are taking new patients.
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Nebraska is the dominant commercial carrier. Medicaid runs through Heritage Health managed care, with Nebraska Total Care, Healthy Blue, and UnitedHealthcare Community Plan as the main options. For employer plans, BCBS, UnitedHealthcare, and Medica are the most common.
An office visit copay is $30 to $75. Pulmonary function tests cost $150 to $500. A chest CT runs $300 to $3,000. A bronchoscopy costs $1,500 to $5,000. Actual costs in Omaha, NE depend on the provider and your insurance plan. Brand-name inhalers can be expensive ($200 to $500 per month). Generic alternatives exist for many common inhalers. Ask your pulmonologist about cost-effective options and manufacturer savings programs.
Omaha has strong physician density relative to other Great Plains cities. Nebraska Medicine and CHI Health Creighton are the two dominant systems, and most specialists affiliate with one. Methodist Health System covers the western suburbs well. Check your insurance network first, as the two academic systems sometimes have different plan participation.
MD stands for Doctor of Medicine and DO stands for Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine. Both are equivalent qualifications. In Omaha, NE, 78% hold the MD credential and 13% hold DO. The difference is in training pathway, not quality of care.
77% of pulmonologists in Omaha, NE accept Medicare. Medicare covers pulmonology visits, PFTs, and pulmonary rehabilitation (up to 36 sessions). Supplemental oxygen and nebulizers are covered under durable medical equipment. You can filter for Medicare-accepting providers on FindClarity.
UNMC operates the only federal quarantine and biocontainment unit in the United States, built in partnership with the Department of Health and Human Services. It gained national attention during the 2014 Ebola response and has since served as the country's primary facility for treating highly infectious diseases.
Yes. Council Bluffs is directly across the Missouri River, and CHI Health Mercy and other Iowa-based providers serve the metro area. However, insurance network participation may differ across state lines, so always verify coverage before booking with an Iowa-based provider.
Top accepted carriers in Omaha, NE include unitedhealthcare, medicare, qhp-93078, qhp-20305, and qhp-17091.
Pulmonology visits are covered as specialist visits. PFTs and imaging require prior authorization in many plans. Inhalers can be expensive, with brand-name combination inhalers costing $200 to $500 per month without insurance. Ask about generic alternatives and manufacturer copay programs. Pulmonary rehabilitation is covered by Medicare and most insurance plans with a physician order.