Updated daily · 2,418 surgeons verified this week

The surgeon is ready
to see you.

Board-certified general surgeons, searchable by procedure, insurance, and hospital. Built for the moment between diagnosis and decision.

0+Verified SurgeonsBoard-certified & credentialed
0Procedures CoveredFrom appendectomies to Whipple
0+Insurance NetworksAccepted across the directory
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Step 01

Verify credentials
before you commit.

Every surgeon in ConsultHub is cross-referenced against the American Board of Surgery, state licensing boards, and the National Practitioner Data Bank — updated every 30 days.

Dr. Margaret Osei-Bonsu

Minimally Invasive Surgery

Northwestern Memorial Hospital

NPI
1234567890
Pending
ABS Certified
American Board of Surgery
Active License
State medical board verified
No Sanctions
NPDB background cleared
Hospital Privileges
Credentialed at listed facility
Malpractice Clear
No active malpractice claims
DEA Registered
Controlled substance clearance
Documented procedures
Laparoscopic CholecystectomyHernia RepairAppendectomy
Step 02

Compare up to three surgeons,
side by side.

Select surgeons from the directory and compare experience, availability, accepted insurance, and patient outcomes — all in one view.

Dr. Margaret Osei-Bonsu
Minimally Invasive Surgery
Chicago, IL
(312)
Dr. James Ramirez-Vela
Colorectal Surgery
Los Angeles, CA
(241)
Dr. Priya Nambiar
Endocrine Surgery
San Francisco, CA
(198)
Dr. Calvin Whitmore
General Surgery
Boston, MA
(176)
Dr. Margaret
Northwestern Memorial
Dr. James
Cedars-Sinai
Experience
18 years
14 years
Procedures performed
2,840
1,960
Surgical approach
Laparoscopic
Robotic-assisted
Next available
Tue, Mar 4
Mon, Mar 3
Patient rating
4.9/5.0
4.8/5.0
Notable
Avg. 22-min lap chole operative time
Fellowship-trained at Mayo Clinic
Insurance
AetnaBCBSUnitedCigna
AetnaMedicareHumanaCigna
Save this comparison
Get a link to bookmark these profiles and share with family or your care coordinator.
Step 03

Understand exactly what will happen
in the operating room.

Step-by-step procedure guides written with surgical residents and reviewed by patient advocates. No euphemisms, no false reassurance — just what you need to know.

Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy

Duration
45–90 minutes
Recovery
1–2 weeks
Anesthesia
General
Approach
Laparoscopic (3–4 small incisions)
Ask your surgeon
  • Can I eat normally after surgery?
  • What are the signs of a bile leak?
  • When can I return to work?
  • Will I need dietary restrictions long-term?

What happens, step by step

6 steps

You will be under general anesthesia — completely asleep and pain-free throughout.

Carbon dioxide gas gently inflates the abdominal cavity to create working space for the surgeon.

A thin camera (laparoscope) is inserted through a small incision near the navel, giving the surgeon a clear view.

The cystic duct and artery are carefully clipped and divided, freeing the gallbladder from the liver bed.

The gallbladder is extracted through the navel incision in a small bag, minimizing contamination risk.

Incisions are closed with absorbable sutures. Most patients go home the same day within 2–4 hours.

Step 04

Check your insurance
before the bill arrives.

347 insurance networks verified. Select yours to see how many surgeons in the directory accept your plan — and what to watch out for.

Select your insurance network to see how many surgeons accept your plan.

Insurance questions, answered

In-network surgeons have negotiated rates with your insurer — you pay only your copay or coinsurance. Out-of-network surgeons bill at full rates; you may pay significantly more or the full amount depending on your plan.

Yes. Anesthesiologists bill separately from surgeons. Always verify that your anesthesiologist is also in-network. ConsultHub flags facilities where anesthesiology groups are known to be out-of-network.

Most insurers require prior authorization (pre-approval) for elective surgeries. Your surgeon's office typically handles this, but you should confirm it was approved before your surgery date to avoid unexpected bills.

This is a common surprise billing scenario. The No Surprises Act provides some protection, but always verify both the surgeon AND the facility are in-network with your plan before scheduling.

Step 05

Your pre-op checklist.
Nothing left to chance.

12 items reviewed by surgical nurses and patient safety coordinators. Work through this before surgery day — then download the PDF to bring to your pre-op appointment.

Checklist progress0%
0 of 12 items completed
0/6 critical items done

By category

Scheduling0/2
Insurance0/2
Medical0/4
Practical0/3
Recovery0/1
Download Pre-Op PDF

Get a printable checklist to bring to your pre-op appointment and share with your care team.

CriticalScheduling

Confirm surgery date, time, and location with the surgical center

CriticalScheduling

Arrange transportation — you cannot drive after general anesthesia

CriticalInsurance

Confirm prior authorization number with your insurer

CriticalInsurance

Verify the anesthesiologist is in-network

CriticalMedical

Disclose all medications including supplements to your surgeon

CriticalMedical

Follow NPO (nothing by mouth) instructions — typically after midnight

ImportantMedical

Complete all pre-op lab work and imaging ordered by your surgeon

ImportantMedical

Schedule your pre-operative physical with your primary care physician

StandardPractical

Prepare your recovery space at home before surgery day

StandardPractical

Pack a bag with ID, insurance card, medication list, and comfortable clothing

ImportantPractical

Designate a medical decision-maker and provide the hospital their contact information

ImportantRecovery

Review post-operative care instructions and identify warning signs to watch for