Clendenin MD is a prescriber-based addiction medicine and pain management practice in Oklahoma City that evaluates and treats opioid use disorder, alcohol use disorder, and chronic pain through medication-assisted treatment (MAT). The practice operates as an independent medical office focused on outpatient care and does not provide detoxification, inpatient rehabilitation, or mental health counseling in-house, placing it in a specific niche within Oklahoma City's addiction medicine landscape.
Clendenin MD combines addiction medicine evaluation with chronic pain management under a single provider. The practice prescribes buprenorphine (Suboxone), naltrexone, and other medications used in opioid use disorder treatment, and manages patients with chronic pain who may also have concurrent substance use disorders. This dual focus is less common in Oklahoma City than single-focus addiction treatment programs or pain clinics; most large systems separate the two specialties entirely. The provider works with patients on an outpatient basis, meaning appointments occur in an office setting rather than a residential facility.
The practice offers new-patient evaluations that include a comprehensive assessment of substance use history, medical history, current symptoms, and readiness for treatment. During the evaluation, the provider discusses which medication-assisted treatment option (buprenorphine, naltrexone, or other agents) suits the patient's goals and medical situation.
Pricing information is not consistently listed online; call the office to confirm current fees. Many addiction medicine practices in Oklahoma charge between $150 and $300 for an initial evaluation, and follow-up visits typically range from $75 to $200, though costs vary significantly if you have insurance. Insurance coverage of addiction medicine services has expanded under the Addiction and Mental Health Parity Act, but formularies and copay structures vary widely by plan. Verify your specific plan's addiction medicine benefits before your appointment.
Prescription costs for buprenorphine, naltrexone, and supporting medications depend on your insurance and pharmacy; buprenorphine films can range from $30 to $200 per month out of pocket, depending on the dose and your plan's coverage.
Oklahoma City's addiction medicine landscape includes large integrated systems, smaller private practices, and federally qualified health centers (FQHCs). Clendenin MD differs in several ways:
Integris Health and OU Health both operate addiction medicine programs within hospital systems, with the advantage of coordinated psychiatric care, hospitalization if needed, and multiple clinic locations. These systems typically have longer wait times (two to four weeks for new patients) but accept a broader range of insurance plans and offer integrated mental health support on-site.
Quail Springs Psychiatric Hospital in Oklahoma City provides 24-hour inpatient and outpatient addiction treatment, suited for patients needing detoxification or intensive residential programming. It is a significantly higher level of care than an outpatient prescriber office and is appropriate when medical detoxification is necessary.
FQHCs such as OU Community Health provide sliding-scale addiction medicine services to uninsured and underinsured patients, making them the lowest-cost entry point for treatment. Wait times can be longer due to volume.
Clendenin MD suits patients who have already decided they want medication-assisted treatment, have stable housing and some ability to attend regular office visits, and may have chronic pain alongside addiction. It does not suit patients who need immediate detoxification, require inpatient care, or depend on integrated psychiatric services on the same campus. It is also not appropriate for early-stage use disorder without medication readiness or for patients with no insurance and no income to pay out of pocket.
This practice is a good fit for established patients who have completed detoxification elsewhere and are transitioning to maintenance on buprenorphine or naltrexone, or for those who want a focused prescriber visit without a broader mental health or case management infrastructure. It also suits patients with both opioid use disorder and chronic pain, since treating pain while on MAT requires a provider who understands both conditions.
It is not suited for newly active users needing immediate medical support, patients with severe psychiatric comorbidities requiring mental health treatment, those without any transportation or housing stability, or anyone uninsured and unable to pay fees out of pocket.
Call to schedule a new-patient appointment; wait times typically range from one to three weeks. Bring a photo ID, insurance card (if applicable), a list of all current medications, and medical records from any previous addiction medicine or psychiatric care if available. Expect the first visit to last 45 to 90 minutes. The provider will take a detailed history of substance use, assess your current situation, review medical and psychiatric history, perform a physical examination if needed, and discuss treatment options. If you are a good candidate and agree to a treatment plan, the provider may prescribe medication that same day; otherwise, you will be scheduled for a second visit after any additional testing or evaluation.
Confirm current hours and location by calling the office directly, as these details change periodically. The practice is located in Oklahoma City proper and offers standard business-hour appointments (typically Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., though this varies). Parking is available on-site or nearby street parking. Ask about telehealth options for follow-up appointments when you call; some addiction medicine practices now offer virtual visits for prescription refills and check-ins, which can reduce barriers to regular care.
This practice fills a gap for patients seeking medication-assisted treatment from a single provider who understands pain management and can prescribe without requiring a separate pain specialist or mental health referral. In a state where wait times for addiction medicine services often exceed six weeks, having a focused prescriber available on a shorter timeline is practical leverage for someone ready to start treatment.
