McBride Clinic is an orthopedic group practice in Oklahoma City focused on joint disorders and arthritis treatment, offering both surgical and nonsurgical approaches across multiple locations within the metro area. As one of the larger independent orthopedic groups in the city, it handles everything from arthritis management and sports injuries to joint replacement and shoulder reconstruction for adult patients.
McBride Clinic functions as a group orthopedic practice rather than a single-location clinic. The organization operates multiple offices across Oklahoma City and operates as a separate entity from hospital systems, giving it independence in scheduling, referral pathways, and treatment protocols. The clinic's primary emphasis is musculoskeletal conditions, with particular depth in arthritis care, which distinguishes it from general orthopedic surgeons who split focus across trauma, pediatric orthopedics, and sports medicine equally.
The clinic handles joint arthroscopy, joint replacement (hips and knees), shoulder surgery, elbow and wrist procedures, and conservative arthritis management including injections and physical therapy referrals. Pricing varies substantially by procedure type and whether surgical intervention is involved. Arthroscopy procedures typically range from $3,000 to $6,000 in out-of-pocket costs (after insurance) depending on joint location and complexity; total joint replacements generally involve $5,000 to $12,000 in patient responsibility post-insurance. Conservative care visits (evaluation and injection procedures) usually cost $200 to $400 per visit after insurance. These figures are verification-dependent as insurance plans vary widely and surgical codes are subject to annual adjustment; confirm exact costs with your insurance and the clinic's billing office before scheduling.
The clinic accepts most major Oklahoma insurance plans, including Blue Cross Blue Shield of Oklahoma, Aetna, Cigna, and Medicare. Uninsured patients should ask about self-pay discounts, which the clinic sometimes offers but do not advertise publicly.
Oklahoma City's orthopedic landscape divides roughly between large hospital-affiliated groups (Mercy, OU Health) and independent practices (McBride, Bone & Joint Institute, Sport Science Medicine). Hospital-affiliated groups typically offer same-building imaging, physical therapy, and same-day surgical scheduling, but may have longer new-patient waits (3 to 8 weeks) because they handle high referral volume from their health systems. McBride Clinic, as an independent group, usually schedules new patients within 2 to 3 weeks and maintains more control over its own OR schedule, a practical advantage if your condition is not urgent but needs timely treatment.
Bone & Joint Institute is the other major independent group in Oklahoma City and operates similarly to McBride (multiple locations, strong arthritis focus, surgical and nonsurgical care). The two are nearly equivalent in scope and pricing; choice between them typically hinges on which surgeon was recommended by your primary care doctor or which locations are most convenient.
Hospital-affiliated groups (particularly Mercy Orthopedics and OU Health Sports Medicine) are preferable if you need same-day imaging interpretation or integrated post-surgical rehabilitation within one system. McBride and independent groups suit patients who want faster appointments and clearer communication from a smaller organization.
McBride Clinic is appropriate for adults with arthritis (osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, post-traumatic arthritis), joint pain from overuse, and candidates for joint replacement or arthroscopic repair. Patients seeking a second opinion or those referred by their primary care doctor fit well here. The clinic also accommodates sports injuries in adults, though it is not marketed as a sports-medicine specialty clinic in the manner that OU Health's sports programs are.
The clinic does not treat pediatric orthopedic conditions or take new pediatric patients. It is not equipped for complex spine surgery (referring those cases to specialists). Patients expecting orthopedic care integrated with on-site imaging and physical therapy in a single facility may prefer Mercy or OU Health despite longer waits.
New patients should bring insurance cards, photo ID, and any prior imaging (X-rays, MRI) on CD or digital file if available. The appointment begins with nursing intake, including detailed pain history and functional limitations. The physician conducts a physical examination of the affected joint, range-of-motion testing, and special orthopedic tests (McMurray's test for knees, Neer test for shoulders, etc.). If imaging is needed and you have not had recent films, the clinic can order X-rays, but advanced imaging (MRI) is typically ordered for later if conservative treatment is considered. The visit usually results in a treatment plan: either conservative management with injections and physical therapy referral, a surgical consultation, or both.
Expect the appointment to last 45 to 60 minutes.
McBride Clinic operates Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with most locations closed weekends and major holidays. Multiple office locations throughout Oklahoma City reduce travel time for most patients; call ahead to confirm your assigned location. Parking is free and ample at each site; public transit access varies by location and should be checked individually. Telehealth consultations are available for follow-up visits but not initial evaluations.
A verification note: office hours can shift seasonally or due to surgeon schedules; confirm hours for your specific location before driving.
McBride Clinic's reputation in Oklahoma City stems from straightforward joint care, reasonable new-patient wait times, and solid surgical outcomes in hip and knee replacement. It remains a practical choice for adults seeking orthopedic treatment outside hospital systems.
