Central Health Services operates as a medical supply retailer and equipment provider serving the Oklahoma City area, with a focus on mobility aids, respiratory equipment, wound care supplies, and diagnostic devices for patients managing conditions at home or in clinical settings. Unlike pharmacy-based supply counters, it functions as a dedicated distributor where equipment selection, fitting, and sourcing take priority, and where clinicians often refer patients directly for specialized items that general pharmacies do not stock.
The business stock spans three core categories: mobility equipment (walkers, canes, wheelchairs, scooters), respiratory and oxygen therapy supplies (concentrators, portable tanks, tubing, masks), and wound care and ostomy products (dressings, compression garments, catheter supplies). A smaller section covers daily living aids such as grab bars, sock aids, and bathroom safety equipment. The store also carries diagnostic items including blood pressure monitors and glucometers. Inventory depth varies by category; respiratory supplies and mobility aids typically show the most choice, while ostomy and catheter products are ordered as needed. Many items require either a prescription or physician referral, and staff verify documentation before dispensing controlled supplies.
Prices reflect medical supply wholesale rates rather than retail markups on consumer wellness items. A standard walker ranges from $50 to $120 depending on frame type and material, while a basic four-wheeled rollator falls between $100 and $180. Oxygen equipment rental (concentrator machines) typically costs $60 to $100 per month, with delivery and setup included. Wound care and ostomy supplies are priced per unit or per box; for example, sterile gauze pads average $15 to $30 per box of 100, while advanced foam dressings run $20 to $40 per pad. Most insurance plans, including Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial carriers, are accepted and processed at the point of sale; the patient copay or out-of-pocket amount depends on the plan's durable medical equipment (DME) benefit. Staff on site can often check coverage before purchase, reducing surprises at checkout. Prices are verification-dependent and can shift with supplier costs and insurance contract changes; customers should confirm final rates by phone before a large order.
Oklahoma City has limited dedicated medical supply stores; most competition comes from large pharmacy chains (CVS, Walgreens) and big-box retailers (Walmart, Target) that stock basic mobility aids and some respiratory items but lack depth in specialized wound care and ostomy categories. Online retailers such as Amazon and medical-specific sites like Vitality Medical offer broader product ranges and often lower prices but eliminate same-day pickup and fitting assistance. Central Health Services suits patients who need immediate pickup (same-day for in-stock items), professional fitting for mobility equipment, or clinician referral pathways that streamline verification and insurance approval. It is not the lowest-cost option for routine items like bandages or glucose test strips, where pharmacies or big-box stores compete on price. It is the practical choice for rental equipment (oxygen concentrators, patient lifts), for high-volume supply orders that require invoicing to a care facility, and for specialized items like compression garments or advanced wound dressings where retail staff lack training.
Central Health Services serves hospital discharge patients who need equipment on the same day, chronic disease patients managing diabetes or respiratory conditions with regular supply needs, facility care coordinators ordering bulk supplies for nursing homes or assisted living communities, and post-surgical patients referred by orthopedic or wound care clinicians. It is less useful for one-time consumer purchases of basic safety items (a single grab bar or shower chair), where a hardware or home improvement store often costs less, or for patients who prefer online shopping and do not need immediate access. Medicaid patients and uninsured customers may find out-of-pocket costs higher than some online alternatives unless the store negotiates a specific discount; verification at the time of quote is essential.
Walk-in customers should bring a prescription or referral letter if a specific item requires one (oxygen, catheters, advanced wound dressings). Staff will confirm insurance coverage and copay liability, then guide you to the product and, where relevant, perform fitting. Mobility aids require walking or sitting trials to ensure proper height and stability; staff will not pressure a quick purchase. If an item is not in stock, staff can typically order it within two to five business days. If you are picking up rental equipment such as an oxygen concentrator, delivery and basic setup instruction are included; staff will explain use, maintenance, and how to request refills. Estimated time for a straightforward visit is 20 to 40 minutes if the item is stocked; add 10 to 15 minutes for insurance verification.
Central Health Services is open Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., closed Saturday and Sunday. It accepts walk-ins during business hours, though a phone call ahead can shorten wait time during peak periods. On-site parking is available at no charge. Verify current hours by phone, as holiday schedules and staffing occasionally shift these times; call ahead if you need an urgent evening or weekend supply. The location is within Oklahoma City proper, accessible by car but not served by public transit.
Central Health Services fills a real gap in Oklahoma City's supply chain: it is the only independent, full-service medical supply operation that combines same-day fulfillment, clinician referral handling, and fitting expertise under one roof.
