McBride Orthopedic Hospital is a 40-bed specialty orthopedic facility in Oklahoma City, independent and focused entirely on bone, joint, and soft-tissue surgery. Unlike general hospitals that staff orthopedic departments among dozens of other services, McBride operates as a dedicated orthopedic surgical center, meaning its infrastructure, operating rooms, and support staff are built specifically for knee replacements, shoulder surgery, spine procedures, and fracture repair. The hospital is not part of a larger health system and sits outside the OU Health and Integris networks that dominate Oklahoma City's medical landscape.
McBride Orthopedic is a surgical hospital, not a primary care or emergency facility. It handles elective and urgent orthopedic procedures on a scheduled basis. Patients arrive for planned surgery, recovery, and short-term inpatient rehabilitation. It does not operate an emergency department and does not treat non-orthopedic acute conditions. If a patient requiring non-orthopedic emergency care arrives, they are transferred to a general hospital. The facility employs surgeons who perform joint replacement, arthroscopy, spine fusion, rotator cuff repair, and fracture fixation. Most patients stay one to three days post-surgery.
McBride handles knee replacement, hip replacement, shoulder surgery, spine procedures, wrist and ankle surgery, and arthroscopic repair. Pricing varies by procedure and surgeon. Joint replacement typically costs between $35,000 and $65,000 before insurance, depending on implant choice and whether the procedure is unilateral or bilateral. Spine fusion ranges from $40,000 to $80,000. Arthroscopic procedures run $15,000 to $35,000. These figures reflect gross charges and do not reflect what insured patients typically pay out of pocket, which depends on their deductible, coinsurance, and plan network status. Uninsured patients should request a price estimate and discuss payment plans directly with the hospital's financial services office; McBride often negotiates self-pay discounts below the posted charge. Verification of current pricing is essential before scheduling, as surgical fees change and vary by surgeon.
McBride is one of two independent orthopedic hospitals in Oklahoma City. The other is Pinnacle Orthopedic Hospital, which also specializes in joint replacement and arthroscopy and operates a similar footprint. Both avoid the overhead of general hospitals. OU Health and Integris operate orthopedic departments within larger facilities (OU Medical Center and Baptist Medical Center, respectively), which handle orthopedic surgery but embed it within multispecialty operations. The key trade-off is efficiency versus breadth: specialty hospitals like McBride move faster and focus resources narrowly, but general hospitals offer seamless coordination if a patient develops a non-orthopedic complication during or after surgery. McBride suits patients with uncomplicated orthopedic needs and good health otherwise; general hospitals suit patients with multiple conditions or higher surgical risk. McBride's surgeons often have admitting privileges at general hospitals as backup.
McBride is best for patients scheduled for routine joint or spine surgery who have no major medical comorbidities and whose recovery is expected to be straightforward. It works well for patients with Medicare, commercial insurance, or self-pay status seeking lower-overhead surgical care. It does not suit patients requiring emergency orthopedic care (acute fracture with complications), patients with significant cardiac or pulmonary disease, or patients without a ride home post-discharge, since the facility offers limited social support. It is not a destination for pediatric orthopedics, as McBride primarily serves adults.
Scheduling a procedure at McBride begins with a consultation with one of the hospital's surgeons, either by referral from a primary care physician or through self-referral. The surgeon evaluates imaging (X-ray or MRI), reviews medical history, and discusses surgical options and timing. Patients complete pre-operative testing (bloodwork, EKG, chest X-ray as indicated by age and health status) at McBride or through their primary care provider. Pre-operative education covers post-surgery restrictions, pain management, and discharge expectations. Patients are instructed to arrive two hours before surgery. Discharge typically occurs the same day for minor arthroscopy or within one to three days for joint replacement, with a prescription for pain medication, physical therapy referral, and explicit weight-bearing and activity restrictions.
McBride Orthopedic Hospital is located in Oklahoma City and operates Monday through Friday for most elective procedures, with some Saturday availability. Urgent orthopedic cases (displaced fractures, acute tendon injuries) can often be accommodated within 48 hours. The facility provides parking adjacent to the building at no charge. Recovery suites are private or semi-private rooms. Contact McBride directly to confirm current operating hours and scheduling timelines, as these may shift seasonally or with surgeon availability.
McBride fills a specific role in Oklahoma City's orthopedic market by removing elective joint surgery from the general hospital pipeline, reducing wait times and infection risk exposure compared to multi-service hospitals. It is a practical choice for uncomplex orthopedic surgery in a market where independent surgical specialty hospitals remain relatively uncommon.
