Lea Porche, MD

Senior Faculty, Baylor College of Medicine

Maternal and Fetal Medicine
English
All Ages
4.8/5 Read Reviews

Meet Lea Porche, MD

Dr. Lea Porche has experience providing complete obstetric and maternal fetal care. In addition, she has extensive surgical experience on a high-risk labor and delivery unit. She incorporates this perspective into the prenatal counseling she provides. Her special interests include prenatal diagnosis with ultrasound, placental disorders, and care and intervention for maternal medical conditions that affect pregnancy. In her spare time, she enjoys spending time with her husband and three children, exercising, journaling, coaching her children’s sports teams, traveling and trying new foods.


Locations


Hospital Affiliations

CHRISTUS Children's

CHRISTUS Health Plan

CHRISTUS Santa Rosa Hospital


Education & Certifications

Fellowship: Eastern Virginia Medical School

Residency: Eastern Virginia Medical School

Medical Education: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine

Certification: American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology


Ratings & Reviews

  • Overall Quality of Care 4.8
  • Listened Carefully 4.8
  • Explained Things Clearly 4.8
  • Spent Enough Time 4.8
  • Showed Courtesy & Respect 4.8

Patient reviews (2)

5.0

Love it there

5.0

They explained really good i felt so comfortable

Featured Article with Related Content

Black newborn baby sleeping

Highlighting Black Maternal Health Week: Preterm Labor and Preterm Birth

Like maternal mortality, racial disparities also exist when it comes to preterm birth in the U.S., with 14.2% of Black infants born prematurely compared to only 9.2% of their white counterparts. Learn more about preterm labor and birth from a CHRISTUS expert for Black Maternal Health Week.

Read the latest stories from CHRISTUS Health Experts

Highlighting Black Maternal Health Week: Maternal Mortality Among Black Mothers

Each year in the U.S., approximately 700 women die during pregnancy or in the 12 months after delivery, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Many of these deaths are preventable, and racial disparities continue to persist in maternal care. In fact, Black women are three times more likely to die from a pregnancy-related cause than white women in the U.S.

Highlighting Black Maternal Health Week: The Risks of Chronic Hypertension during Pregnancy

Monitoring blood pressure is an important part of any pregnancy, but high blood pressure—known as hypertension—can have adverse effects for both a mother and her baby. According to a recent article published in the Journal of Women’s Health, Black women in the United States have rates of hypertension that are 50% higher than white women, and they are 40% more likely to develop cardiovascular disease—for which hypertension is a risk factor.