← Main site (drmehtaurology.com)  ·  Inpatient site (inpatient.drmehtaurology.com)

For referring providers

Referring to Urology

Sandeep Mehta, MD — Urology · Houston Methodist Baytown · Phone 832.556.6046

This page is for clinicians referring patients to urology — both from outpatient clinics and from the hospital. Choose the path that applies:
Outpatient ReferralsScheduled · clinic to clinic Inpatient ConsultsHospitalized patients · urgent
Outpatient ReferralsScheduled

Who should the patient see?

Refer to Sandeep Mehta, MD

Complex, procedural, or surgical

  • Cancer discussions — elevated PSA, suspected or known prostate / kidney / bladder cancer
  • Complex or indeterminate renal cysts — need adjudication and a risk / benefit / alternatives discussion of observation vs. treatment
  • Procedural or surgical decision-making
  • Actual surgical needs
  • Any complex medical decision-making
Refer to Catherine Valencia, NP

Non-surgical, medical, or workup — seen first

  • Medication management — BPH, ED, catheter / med management
  • Infectious / inflammatory — recurrent UTIs and similar
  • Simple (benign-appearing) renal cysts
  • Positive urine dipstick not yet confirmed on micro — recheck first (see hematuria note)
  • When you’d like urology to do the workup — e.g., you want us to order the CT urogram or prostate MRI

You can name Catherine Valencia, NP on the referral, or simply note “to Urology — NP for infectious / inflammatory / medication management.”

Send to Dr. Mehta even if the patient only wanted a prescription

How our team works — and why the NP is the right first visit for many patients

Catherine Valencia, NP and Sandeep Mehta, MD practice as one team. Many urology problems — medication management, infections, catheter care, stable follow-ups, and getting the workup started — are handled expertly by Catherine, often with a shorter wait for an appointment.

We refer internally with no extra step or new referral for the patient. If something turns out to be surgical, complicated, or needs urgent evaluation, Catherine brings Dr. Mehta in — frequently during the same visit. A visit with the NP is not a downgrade; it’s the right entry point for many problems, with the physician right there when needed.

Meet the team: Sandeep Mehta, MD  ·  Catherine Valencia, NP

Please have your patient bring their records

This is the single biggest thing that prevents delays — especially for records from outside Houston Methodist, which often do not reach us in time. Ask your patient to bring everything to the appointment:

Full patient instructions: Before Your Visit →

How to refer

Preferred
Epic referral order
Place an ambulatory referral to Urology — Houston Methodist Baytown.
Or
Fax: (281) 428-4750
Office
Phone 832.556.6046
4201 Garth Road, Suite 307, Baytown, TX 77521

Faxing? Please send all clinical information with the referral — the office note / reason for referral, relevant labs, and imaging reports. A faxed referral without clinical information can’t be triaged or scheduled, and will be delayed. (An Epic referral carries the chart automatically.)

Pre-referral workup (helpful, not required)

You can order these directly, or refer to the NP first and ask urology to order them — either way speeds scheduling and triage.

Reason for referralSuggested workup before / with referral
Suspected stones / renal colicNon-contrast CT (stone protocol), urinalysis, basic metabolic panel
Elevated PSARepeat PSA (rule out UTI first); prostate MRI
HematuriaConfirm on microscopic UA first — see the hematuria note below
Scrotal mass or painScrotal ultrasound
Hydronephrosis / rising creatinineThe flagging imaging, plus recent renal function

Hematuria — a quick note for PCPs

Inpatient ConsultsHospitalists · Nursing · Case management

Reaching me

Easiest is Epic Secure Chat or the Epic On-Call Finder. Our internally-updated urology on-call calendar: Urology On-Call Calendar → (Houston Methodist sign-in).

Many inpatient consults are managed by ruling out an emergency, stabilizing the patient, and arranging outpatient follow-up — the full workup doesn’t always need to be completed before discharge. At discharge, place an ambulatory referral to Urology. Hospital-team discharge checklists & patient handouts: inpatient.drmehtaurology.com.

Who to route to at discharge

Refer to Sandeep Mehta, MD

Procedural · complex · red flag

  • Cancer or suspicious imaging — renal mass, bladder mass, abnormal PSA
  • Gross hematuria needing cystoscopy
  • Stones needing intervention; stent or nephrostomy; obstruction
  • Failed void trials, outlet obstruction, urethral stricture
  • Urgent surgical pathology — call directly
Refer to Catherine Valencia, NP

Medical · management

  • Trial of void after retention (Foley at discharge)
  • Catheter care & Foley removal planning
  • Recurrent UTI, epididymitis, pyelonephritis — medical follow-up
  • Mild / incidental hydronephrosis, stable function
  • Uncomplicated small-stone follow-up

Detailed routing by finding

Appropriate for NP follow-up firstPrefer doctor / surgeon follow-up
Acute urinary retention with Foley; needs trial of voidRecurrent failed void trials, catheter dependence, very large prostate, bladder stones, or chronic outlet obstruction on imaging
Female urinary retention requiring initial evaluationFemale retention with complex anatomy, neurogenic concern, or InterStim pathway. Prolapse / pelvic-floor–predominant → gynecology
Catheter care and Foley removal planningUrethral stricture, traumatic catheterization, false passage, or difficult Foley placement
Mild or incidental hydronephrosis, stable renal function, no infectionHydronephrosis with AKI, infection, pain, solitary kidney, bilateral/severe, mass, or suspected obstruction
Recurrent UTI, epididymitis, pyelonephritis — medical follow-up via PCP or urology NPObstructed infected stone, abscess, emphysematous infection, fistula, hardware complication — or any infection with a significant urologic finding
Simple or benign-appearing renal cystsRenal mass, complex/enhancing cyst, bladder mass, or suspicious bladder imaging
LUTS requiring medication reviewGross hematuria — especially recurrent, unexplained, or with clots (needs cystoscopy)
Uncomplicated small stone follow-up, pain controlled, no urgent surgical issueUreteral stone with stent, nephrostomy, AKI, infection, solitary kidney, recurrent ED visits, large stone, or persistent obstruction
Scrotal abscess, Fournier’s concern, torsion concern, or other urgent surgical pathology — call urology directly

A few routing notes that apply to both settings

Information that helps scheduling & triage

Example referral wording:

“Ambulatory referral to Urology — gross hematuria resolved inpatient; needs outpatient hematuria evaluation.”

“Ambulatory referral to Urology — urinary retention discharged with Foley; needs trial of void.”

Red flags that should not wait for routine outpatient follow-up