Midwest Occupational Medicine is an occupational health clinic in Oklahoma City that serves employers and injured workers through pre-employment exams, on-site injury treatment, and workers' compensation case management. The practice operates as a specialty medical center designed for company partnerships rather than as a traditional family medicine practice, focusing on getting workers back to the job and managing employer liability.
The clinic operates primarily on a B2B model, contracting with Oklahoma City employers, construction firms, and oil and gas operations to provide baseline health clearances, fit-for-duty evaluations, and rapid response to workplace injuries. It also accepts injured workers as direct patients when they are referred by their employer or workers' compensation carrier. The practice differs structurally from primary care doctors in that most patient contact flows through employer relationships and claim management systems rather than through insurance-based individual appointments.
Midwest Occupational Medicine handles pre-employment physicals, workplace injury treatment, return-to-work assessments, and drug screening. Employers contract for specific exam packages; a basic pre-employment physical typically ranges from $150 to $250 per employee, while expanded panels with substance screening cost $250 to $400. Injured-worker visits follow workers' compensation fee schedules set by the Oklahoma Workers' Compensation Commission, meaning direct patient cost depends on the claim and carrier approval rather than standard office visit rates. The clinic also offers on-site services, with mobile clinics available for companies with 20 or more employees; pricing for on-site programs begins at approximately $1,500 per visit plus travel. Verify current contract rates with the clinic directly, as employer agreements are negotiated individually.
Oklahoma City has several occupational health providers, but Midwest Occupational Medicine competes primarily against larger hospital-affiliated urgent care networks and independent occupational clinics. OU Health Occupational Medicine, affiliated with the university medical system, operates multiple locations and integrates with OU's electronic medical records and specialist referral network; it suits employers seeking integrated medical records or employees needing follow-up with university specialists. Midwest Occupational Medicine typically offers faster appointment availability and lower negotiated rates for high-volume employer contracts, making it the choice for cost-sensitive mid-sized companies. Hospitals' occupational clinics tend to be more expensive and better suited for complex injury cases needing imaging or specialist consultation on-site. For a small business needing quick pre-employment screening, Midwest's specialist focus and direct employer relationships usually result in lower per-exam costs.
Midwest Occupational Medicine is the right fit for Oklahoma City employers with 10 or more employees seeking bulk pre-employment services, construction and manufacturing firms managing ongoing workplace safety programs, and injured workers navigating workers' compensation claims. It does not suit patients looking for general primary care, chronic disease management, or specialists outside occupational health scope. A worker recovering from a major injury requiring long-term physical therapy or an employer needing complex ergonomic workplace assessment may benefit more from a larger occupational medicine center with PT services and consultants on staff.
For employers: a benefits manager or HR contact schedules a contract consultation to define exam scope, pricing, and scheduling. For injured workers: a referral from the employer or workers' compensation carrier directs the patient to the clinic; the first visit includes injury history, physical examination, work-capacity evaluation, and documentation for the carrier. Workers' compensation exams typically take 45 minutes to an hour and result in a report sent directly to the employer and carrier, not to the patient's personal medical record.
Midwest Occupational Medicine operates Monday through Friday during standard business hours; specific hours should be confirmed by calling or visiting their website, as occupational clinics sometimes adjust for employer on-site visits. Parking is available on-site. The clinic is located in central Oklahoma City, accessible from most major employers in the metro area within 15 minutes. Appointment scheduling is handled through the clinic directly or through the employer's benefits administrator.
Midwest Occupational Medicine fills a specific niche in Oklahoma City's medical landscape: it is built for employers and workers' compensation systems, not for patients seeking primary care or specialist referrals, and that specialization makes it efficient and cost-effective for exactly the organizations and claims it targets.
