Paceway Pain Care operates as an independent pain management clinic in Edmond focused on injection-based and interventional approaches, serving patients seeking alternatives to opioid management or surgical referral. The practice sits in the middle tier of the Oklahoma City pain care landscape: larger than single-provider offices, smaller and more specialized than hospital-affiliated pain centers, and positioned explicitly against the opioid-prescription model that defined many pain practices in the 2010s.
Paceway Pain Care is a multispecialty interventional pain management clinic. The practice works within the spine, joint, and soft-tissue pain space using fluoroscopy-guided injections, nerve blocks, and other image-guided interventional techniques. The staff includes board-certified pain management physicians and nurse practitioners trained in procedural care. The clinic does not perform major surgery; instead, it aims to manage pain through controlled injection, physical rehabilitation referral, and conservative escalation. Patients typically arrive with referrals from primary care doctors or orthopedic surgeons, though self-referral is usually accepted.
Paceway Pain Care offers epidural steroid injections (for spine pain), facet joint injections (for localized back or neck pain), sacroiliac joint injections, trigger-point injections for muscle pain, and peripheral nerve blocks for targeted regional pain. Many practices in Oklahoma City charge $500–$800 per epidural steroid injection out of pocket; insurance coverage varies by plan, deductible status, and whether the procedure meets medical necessity criteria defined by the insurer. Confirm current pricing and your insurance coverage before scheduling; many patients find that insurance covers 60–80% of procedural costs once a deductible is met, though some plans require prior authorization.
Initial consultations typically run 45–60 minutes and may cost $150–$300 without insurance. Subsequent injection procedures and follow-up visits follow a separate fee schedule. Ask during booking whether the clinic offers package pricing for patients receiving multiple injections over a set timeframe.
Edmond pain management options divide into three categories: primary care doctors with pain prescription authority (lower cost, limited procedural scope), hospital-based pain centers affiliated with OU Health or Integris (higher volume, broader imaging access, more insurance flexibility), and independent procedural clinics like Paceway. Paceway's independence means it may have shorter appointment wait times than hospital systems; however, hospital-affiliated practices often have on-site imaging (MRI, CT) and established relationships with specialists. Choose Paceway if you want a focused procedural approach without hospital infrastructure overhead; choose a hospital-based pain center if you need rapid imaging or complex multidisciplinary coordination. Choose primary care if your pain is mild and you are exploring conservative management before any intervention.
Paceway Pain Care is well suited for patients with localized chronic pain (one or two joint areas or a spine segment), those seeking to reduce or eliminate opioid dependence, and those who have failed conservative treatments (physical therapy, anti-inflammatory medication) but are not surgical candidates or do not want surgery. It is not ideal for patients with systemic pain (widespread fibromyalgia, whole-body inflammatory conditions), acute pain requiring emergency care, or those whose insurance does not cover procedural pain management. Patients on high-dose opioids requiring rapid taper and behavioral support are better served by addiction medicine clinics or hospital-based pain programs with integrated psychology.
A first appointment at Paceway Pain Care begins with intake paperwork and a comprehensive pain history covering location, onset, severity, prior treatments, and imaging results. The provider performs a physical examination, reviews any available imaging (bring MRI or CT films if you have them), and discusses whether your pain pattern fits the clinic's procedural scope. If it does, the provider explains the planned procedure, answers questions about downtime and recovery, and usually schedules the injection for the same day or within one to two weeks. If additional imaging is needed before proceeding, the clinic will refer you to an imaging center; some facilities partner with local radiology practices for faster turnaround.
Paceway Pain Care operates Monday through Friday; typical clinic hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., though procedural scheduling may extend into early evening on select days. Verify current hours when you call, as staffing fluctuates seasonally. The clinic is located on the north side of Edmond and offers on-site parking in a shared medical plaza lot. Most procedures are same-day outpatient, requiring two to four hours including recovery time. Plan to have a driver available; most insurers and facilities recommend not driving for 24 hours after procedural sedation, even light sedation. The clinic accepts most major insurance plans and offers self-pay rates for uninsured patients; ask whether a flat-fee self-pay price is available if your insurance does not cover the procedure.
Paceway Pain Care fills a practical gap in Edmond: independent procedural pain management without hospital billing overhead or the wait times that larger systems sometimes carry. The clinic is best for patients with specific, treatable pain and a preference for needle-based intervention over pills or surgery.
