New Hope Treatment is an outpatient substance abuse and mental health clinic serving Oklahoma City residents who need counseling and recovery support without residential admission. The practice operates on a lower threshold than inpatient rehab, accepting walk-in clients and scheduled appointments for individuals managing addiction, depression, anxiety, and co-occurring disorders.
New Hope operates as a dual-diagnosis clinic, meaning it treats both addiction and psychiatric conditions in the same setting. The model is designed for people who have work, school, or family obligations that make inpatient treatment impractical, or who have completed a residential stay and need ongoing outpatient support. The clinic handles initial assessments, individual counseling, group therapy, and psychiatric medication management. It functions as a first stop for some clients and a continuing-care step for others discharged from inpatient programs.
Individual therapy sessions cost $80 to $120 per hour, depending on whether the therapist holds an LCSW (licensed clinical social worker) or LPC (licensed professional counselor) credential. Group sessions run $40 to $60 per participant and meet weekly on scheduled days. Psychiatric evaluation and medication management with the clinic physician runs $150 for initial intake and $75 to $100 for follow-up visits. Many clients apply Medicaid, Medicare, or commercial insurance to these fees; uninsured clients pay the stated rates. The clinic accepts self-pay, and fees can vary if your plan negotiates a different rate. Confirm current pricing and insurance networks by contacting the clinic directly, as insurance contracts shift annually.
New Hope functions differently from larger hospital-based psychiatric departments like those at OU Health or Mercy. A hospital emergency department handles acute crises and brief stabilization; New Hope does not provide crisis intake and is not appropriate for someone in acute distress. Hospitals are better for suicidal or homicidal ideation, severe withdrawal, or active psychosis.
New Hope also differs from private therapists in solo practice. A solo therapist may have longer appointment availability but typically does not offer on-site psychiatric medication evaluation. New Hope brings both counselors and a psychiatrist under one roof, simplifying coordination if your treatment involves both talk therapy and medication.
Compared to intensive outpatient programs (IOP), which meet 9 to 20 hours per week, New Hope functions at a lower intensity. IOP suits people in early recovery who need frequent monitoring; New Hope suits those further along or those unable to attend IOP schedules.
Choose New Hope if you have a stable home and job, can attend weekly appointments, and want integrated substance abuse and mental health care. Choose a hospital ED if you are in crisis. Choose IOP if you need frequent contact and structure in early recovery. Choose a solo therapist if you want long-term psychotherapy without medication management.
New Hope is designed for adults 18 and older managing substance use disorders (alcohol, opioids, methamphetamine, cocaine) alongside depression, anxiety, PTSD, or bipolar disorder. It suits people with 30 to 90 days of sobriety or those returning to stable outpatient care after inpatient treatment. It also accepts people not yet ready to commit to inpatient rehab but motivated to engage in outpatient work.
The clinic does not serve minors; pediatric substance abuse treatment in Oklahoma City is handled by separate adolescent programs. New Hope is not equipped for acute medical withdrawal (severe alcohol or benzodiazepine withdrawal requires medical hospitalization). It does not offer court-ordered evaluation or forensic services; those referrals go to specialized assessment providers.
New Hope typically books first appointments within 3 to 7 days for motivated clients. You will complete an intake assessment lasting 60 to 90 minutes, covering substance use history, psychiatric symptoms, medical history, current medications, and social support. The therapist or social worker documents triggers, previous treatment attempts, and what brought you in. If psychiatric care is needed, you may meet briefly with the physician during intake or be scheduled for a separate psychiatric evaluation within 1 to 2 weeks. You will be asked about insurance and payment method. Many clients leave intake with a standing weekly therapy appointment and a follow-up date with either the therapist or psychiatrist.
New Hope operates Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., with some evening slots on Wednesday and Thursday until 6 p.m. (verify availability when calling; evening hours occasionally shift). The clinic is located in a small office suite with street parking and a small lot. Most visits take 45 minutes to one hour. The building is accessible to people with mobility limitations. Telehealth appointments are available upon request for follow-ups, though initial intake is typically in person.
New Hope Treatment fills a practical gap in Oklahoma City's mental health network: it bundles counseling and medication management at a scale smaller and less costly than hospital psychiatric programs, yet more coordinated than isolated therapy. For working adults managing addiction or dual diagnosis in Oklahoma City, it offers accessible continuity.
