Jamie Leal is an addiction medicine physician in Oklahoma City who takes new patients and accepts commercial insurance, working in an outpatient model focused on medication-assisted treatment and behavioral support for people with opioid and alcohol use disorders. The practice reflects a shift in Oklahoma toward office-based addiction care: rather than directing patients to residential rehab exclusively, Leal operates as a primary care specialist for addiction, seeing patients regularly and prescribing medications like buprenorphine and naltrexone as part of ongoing treatment.
Leal operates as an individual addiction medicine doctor, not a large treatment center or hospital-based program. The scope is outpatient medication management and counseling coordination for adults with opioid use disorder, alcohol use disorder, and polysubstance dependence. Unlike many treatment programs in Oklahoma that emphasize intensive outpatient programming (IOP) or 28-day residential stays, Leal's model aligns with standard addiction medicine practice: regular office visits, prescription monitoring, and referral to behavioral health services. This approach works well for people who need medication stability without the disruption of leaving home for weeks.
Leal prescribes buprenorphine (typically as Suboxone or generic equivalents) and naltrexone (Vivitrol, extended-release injectable, or oral naltrexone). Buprenorphine is a partial opioid agonist that reduces cravings and withdrawal and carries a lower overdose risk than full agonists; it is the most common medication for opioid use disorder in office-based practices nationwide. Naltrexone is a full antagonist and suits patients who want to block opioid effects entirely or those with alcohol use disorder as a primary concern.
Specific pricing is not publicly listed and varies by insurance plan. Oklahoma Medicaid covers both buprenorphine and injectable naltrexone; commercial plans typically cover buprenorphine with a copay (often $20 to $50 per visit) and naltrexone with higher out-of-pocket cost unless the plan includes extended-release injectables. Confirm your plan's coverage and any prior authorization requirements directly with Leal's office.
Visits are scheduled appointments, usually monthly after stabilization, though the frequency may increase during induction or after episodes of use. Telehealth visits are common in addiction medicine; ask whether this option is available if office attendance is difficult.
Oklahoma City addiction treatment splits into distinct categories. Large programs such as Promises Drug and Alcohol Treatment Centers and Integris Health's addiction services offer residential and intensive outpatient models, lasting weeks or months; they suit people who need structured settings and cannot safely maintain stability at home. Office-based practices like Leal's are fewer and less widely known. Another local option is the OU Medicine addiction medicine clinic at 920 Stanton L. Young Boulevard, which combines a teaching environment with similar medication-assisted treatment but longer wait times and less flexibility. Leal's independent practice typically allows faster intake and more direct continuity with one provider.
Choose Leal if you need medication-assisted treatment in an office setting, have some stability at home, and want to avoid the cost and time commitment of residential programs. Choose a residential program if you are early in recovery, unsafe at home, or have not yet stabilized on medication. Choose Integris or OU Medicine if you have complex medical needs or need integrated behavioral health under one roof.
This practice suits adults with opioid or alcohol use disorder who are seeking medication-assisted treatment, have insurance or ability to pay, and can attend regular appointments. It suits people who have tried other treatment and want continuity with one doctor. It does not suit people in acute crisis (go to an ER or urgent care), people without insurance who cannot pay out of pocket (Oklahoma Medicaid and free/sliding-scale clinics are alternative routes), or those who require 24-hour supervision.
An intake appointment includes a clinical history (family history of addiction, past treatment, medical and psychiatric conditions), urine drug screen, physical exam, and assessment for medication fit. Leal will typically discuss induction onto buprenorphine if opioid use disorder is the diagnosis: starting low, titrating up over days to weeks to avoid precipitated withdrawal. You will receive a prescription, information about counseling referrals (which are separate from the medication visit but highly encouraged), and a plan for follow-up. Bring insurance information and any past medical records. The visit usually takes 60 to 90 minutes.
Specific hours are not publicly confirmed; contact the office directly. Leal accepts commercial insurance and Oklahoma Medicaid. Parking and location details require verification by calling ahead. Appointment wait time for new patients is usually one to four weeks, depending on referral source and capacity.
Leal represents a rare model in Oklahoma City: a solo addiction medicine doctor who prescribes medication and sees patients in continuity, without requiring 28-day commitment or only offering counseling. This option fills a gap for employed adults and others who need treatment flexibility and should not be overlooked in favor of larger programs.
