Oklahoma Pain Management is a single-location medical practice in Shawnee that treats chronic and acute pain using injections, oral medications, and muscle relaxants rather than major surgery or opioid-first protocols. The practice serves Pottawatomie County and parts of northern Oklahoma County, occupying space that also houses primary care and occupational therapy, which makes same-day coordination possible for patients needing multiple disciplines.
The practice functions as a non-surgical pain specialty clinic rather than a comprehensive pain center. A single physician-owner operates the office and performs injections during scheduled blocks. The clinic does not house a surgical suite, operate an implantable device program, or manage acute hospital admissions. Patients come here for conditions like lower back pain, neck pain, shoulder impingement, and joint arthritis when conservative care has stalled but surgery is either not yet warranted or the patient prefers to avoid it.
Injectable treatments dominate the menu. Epidural steroid injections for the lumbar spine or cervical spine range from $800 to $1,200 per injection; typical treatment protocols involve one to three injections spaced four to six weeks apart. Facet joint injections cost $600 to $900. Trigger point injections into muscles run $200 to $400 per session. Sacroiliac joint injections are offered at $700 to $1,100. Most patients use insurance, and the practice accepts Medicare; out-of-pocket costs depend on deductible and plan design, so verification with your insurer or the office is essential before scheduling.
The practice also manages pain through oral medication management. Common classes include muscle relaxants (often prescribed for acute muscle strain), neuropathic agents like gabapentin or pregabalin, and non-opioid anti-inflammatories. Medication adjustments and monitoring happen during office visits, which are typically $150 to $250 for a follow-up and $200 to $300 for a new-patient comprehensive visit.
Shawnee has no other dedicated pain management practices. Patients with chronic pain in the city typically start with their primary care doctor or are referred to an orthopedic surgeon if they are surgical candidates. Shawnee Regional Hospital, the primary acute care facility in the area, does not operate a pain clinic. For complex regional pain syndrome, spinal cord stimulator consideration, or interventional pain procedures beyond basic injections, patients are referred out to Oklahoma City clinics, a 40-minute drive north. Oklahoma Pain Management therefore fills the gap between primary care and OKC-based comprehensive pain centers, making it the practical choice for someone with straightforward mechanical pain who needs an injection but wants to avoid the drive repeatedly or the cost of major surgery in the city.
The practice works well for patients with documented structural or inflammatory pain (confirmed by imaging or physical exam) who have tried physical therapy or conservative measures without full relief. Workers' compensation cases and auto injury follow-ups are common. Patients whose pain is primarily neuropathic, complex regional pain syndrome, or fibromyalgia also benefit from the medication management side, though they may not need or be candidates for injection.
The practice is not suited to acute post-operative pain management, cancer pain requiring specialist oversight, or pain in patients with active substance use disorder seeking pain medications without other medical support. Patients needing surgeries like fusion, arthroscopy, or joint replacement are referred to orthopedic surgeons.
New patients complete a health history and pain questionnaire in the waiting room, usually adding 15 minutes to the appointment. The physician performs a targeted physical examination, reviews any imaging (MRI, X-ray, CT) the patient has brought, and discusses injection candidacy and expected timeline. If the patient is appropriate for injection, some providers schedule the procedure immediately; Oklahoma Pain Management typically schedules the first injection for a return visit within one to two weeks to allow time for paperwork and insurance pre-authorization. Pain patients should bring a current medication list, insurance card, and any recent imaging films or reports.
The clinic operates Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with injectable procedures scheduled in two-hour blocks, typically mid-morning. Parking is free in a dedicated lot off-street. The office is located on East MacArthur Street in east Shawnee, about 1.5 miles from downtown. Confirm current hours by phone before traveling; medical practices occasionally adjust schedules seasonally or due to physician availability. Appointment wait times range from one week for routine medication follow-ups to two to three weeks for injection slots during busy seasons (fall and winter).
Oklahoma Pain Management fills a practical need in Shawnee: it removes the cost and time burden of repeated drives to Oklahoma City for routine injections while offering qualified local medical oversight for pain that resists first-line care.
