Dr. L. Sam Musallam runs a family practice in Oklahoma City that accepts new patients, handles routine and chronic illness care, and operates on a walk-in basis for established patients—a model less common than appointment-only practices but valuable for families managing unpredictable schedules or minor acute issues.
Dr. Musallam operates a traditional family medicine office serving Oklahoma City residents across age ranges. Family medicine providers diagnose and manage acute infections, chronic conditions like diabetes and hypertension, preventive care, and minor procedures in-office. Unlike a specialist, a family physician coordinates your overall care and refers to cardiologists, orthopedists, or other specialists when needed. Dr. Musallam's practice functions as a primary care home for patients seeking continuity rather than jumping between urgent care and ER visits.
Standard family medicine visits address acute illness (cough, sore throat, fever), chronic disease management (medication adjustments, monitoring), preventive exams (annual physicals, age-appropriate screening), and minor procedures (suture removal, cyst drainage). Most practices bill insurers directly; patient cost depends on your plan's copay or deductible. Out-of-pocket cost for an uninsured visit typically ranges from 100 to 200 dollars for a standard office call, though specific pricing should be confirmed directly.
The walk-in model means you can address illness without scheduling weeks ahead, though wait times during peak hours (morning, early afternoon) run longer than appointment visits. Established patients benefit most from this setup; new patients can call to schedule an initial appointment rather than walk in.
Most Oklahoma City family medicine offices operate by appointment only, requiring you to call days or weeks in advance and manage scheduling around work or school. Urgent care centers (NextCare, FastMed, local clinic chains) accept true walk-ins with no appointment needed and serve acute issues quickly, but they provide no continuity; you see a different provider each visit and no records follow you to future visits or specialists. Musallam's hybrid approach—established patients can walk in, new patients call—splits the difference: established patients get access without a long wait list, while the practice maintains some control over volume. If you want a single primary care doctor who knows your history, family medicine is superior to urgent care. If you need immediate care tonight and do not have an established relationship, urgent care is faster.
Family medicine with walk-in access works well for families with young children managing ear infections or colds, adults with stable chronic conditions needing routine refills or check-ins, and people without consistent work schedules who cannot plan appointments weeks ahead. It is less ideal if you require complex specialist care or need same-day imaging or lab work; those often route through ER or urgent care with lab on-site. It does not suit patients seeking cosmetic medicine, mental health counseling, or care for psychiatric conditions (which require a psychiatrist or therapist).
New patients typically call to schedule an initial appointment. Bring insurance information, photo ID, and a list of current medications and allergies. The first visit usually lasts 30 to 45 minutes and covers your medical history, current health concerns, a physical exam, and review of any preventive care due (vaccinations, cancer screening). Dr. Musallam may order bloodwork or imaging if indicated. You will establish your medical record at the practice, allowing faster follow-up visits and coordination with specialists he refers you to.
Verify current hours and parking directly with the practice, as family medicine offices adjust schedules seasonally and for provider availability. Most Oklahoma City practices offer morning and afternoon slots on weekdays; some offer Saturday hours. Ask about parking when you call; downtown and midtown Oklahoma City offices often have street or lot parking nearby.
Oklahoma City residents juggle varying work schedules, school runs, and managing health for multiple family members. A family physician who offers walk-in care for established patients reduces friction: a child's fever or parent's infection does not automatically trigger an ER copay or urgent care visit. Continuity of care from one doctor familiar with your family's history improves diagnosis and prevents duplicate testing. For families seeking medical home rather than episodic care, Dr. Musallam's practice provides that grounding in Oklahoma City's primary care landscape.
