Craig Dickman, MD in Baltimore: OB/GYN Serving Downtown and Harbor East Patients
Capital Women's Care is an obstetrics and gynecology practice centered on Dr. Craig Dickman's office in downtown Baltimore, providing prenatal and gynecological care to pregnant patients, women in their reproductive years, and those navigating menopause and beyond. The practice maintains a focused clinical scope across pregnancy management, routine gynecological exams, contraception counseling, and menopausal treatment, positioning itself as a community-based alternative to hospital-affiliated OB/GYN departments and larger medical systems for patients who prefer a smaller practice setting.
What Capital Women's Care actually is
Dr. Dickman's practice operates as a private obstetrics and gynecology office rather than a hospital-based or academic-affiliated clinic. This structure means prenatal care and routine gynecological services are delivered in an outpatient setting, with higher-risk pregnancies or those requiring inpatient labor and delivery managed in coordination with hospital partners. The practice accepts insurance, operates on a referral-friendly model for specialty consultation, and maintains standard scheduling rather than a walk-in clinic format.
Services, insurance, and appointment lead times
Capital Women's Care provides standard OB/GYN services including initial prenatal evaluation and care throughout pregnancy, routine gynecological exams with cervical cancer screening, contraception counseling and prescription, menopausal symptom management, and evaluation of common gynecological concerns such as irregular bleeding or pelvic pain. The practice accepts most major insurance plans, including those under the Johns Hopkins, University of Maryland, and Medstar health systems, though coverage varies by individual plan. Verify specific plan acceptance at the time of scheduling. New-patient appointments typically require scheduling 2 to 4 weeks in advance for routine gynecological care; pregnant patients seeking prenatal care can often be seen sooner depending on gestational age.
How it compares to other Baltimore OB/GYN options
Baltimore's obstetric landscape divides into three main models: private practices like Capital Women's Care, hospital-based OB/GYN departments (particularly Johns Hopkins, University of Maryland, and Medstar), and academic medical center clinics serving lower-income and uninsured patients. Private practices such as Dickman's typically offer continuity with one or two providers throughout pregnancy, no resident involvement in care, shorter visit times, and easier access to the same clinician across multiple appointments. Hospital-based departments provide on-site delivery facilities, rapid access to operative delivery and ICU care, and teamwork with anesthesia and pediatrics, but patients may see rotating providers and wait longer for appointments if the practice is large. Academic clinics (University of Maryland's Obstetrics Clinic, for example) offer reduced-cost care and specialized expertise but operate on capacity-constrained schedules. Choose Capital Women's Care if you want continuity with a single provider and shorter appointment lead times; choose a hospital-based practice if you have high-risk pregnancy factors, are uninsured, or need a large departmental structure; choose an academic clinic if cost is the primary factor and you do not require private-practice continuity.
Who it suits and who it should not be
Capital Women's Care is well suited to low-risk pregnant patients, women seeking routine gynecological care without complex medical conditions, and patients who value a smaller practice and consistent provider relationship across multiple visits. It is less suitable for high-risk pregnancies (multiple gestations, significant maternal medical illness, fetal anomalies), patients without insurance, and those who need in-house anesthesia, neonatology, or ICU services immediately available; these patients are better served by hospital obstetric departments. Patients seeking midwifery-attended birth or birthing centers should note that Capital Women's Care is a physician practice and does not provide those models.
What the first visit involves
First prenatal visits typically include a detailed obstetrical and medical history, physical exam including vital signs and abdominal exam, dating ultrasound or confirmation of gestational age, urine culture and screening labs, and counseling on prenatal care expectations, screening tests (such as first-trimester combined screening or sequential screening), and delivery planning. Routine gynecological first visits involve a medical and surgical history, pelvic exam with cervical cancer screening, and discussion of contraception, menstrual history, or other presenting concerns. Plan for 45 minutes to one hour for initial prenatal visits; follow-up prenatal visits are typically 15 to 20 minutes.
Hours, location, and parking
Capital Women's Care operates from a downtown Baltimore office. Standard office hours are Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with some extended or early appointments available. Street parking is available in downtown Baltimore; verify specific office parking access at the time of scheduling. Confirm current hours directly with the practice, as physician availability and office scheduling can change seasonally.
Dr. Dickman's long-standing presence in downtown Baltimore and his private-practice model appeal to patients seeking personalized, continuity-based obstetrical and gynecological care within the city.

