Elite Home Care brings licensed physical therapy directly to patients' homes across Oklahoma City and surrounding areas, eliminating travel and allowing recovery to happen in the environment where people actually live.
This is a home health agency licensed by the State of Oklahoma Health Care Authority, operating statewide but serving the Oklahoma City metro. The practice specializes in post-acute physical therapy: patients recovering from joint replacement surgery, stroke, orthopedic injury, or mobility loss receive one-on-one treatment in their own homes rather than at an outpatient clinic. Therapy is delivered by licensed physical therapists (LPTs) and physical therapist assistants (PTAs), not aides. The agency also provides occupational therapy and skilled nursing when ordered by a physician, but physical therapy is the primary service for most referrals.
Home-based therapy differs fundamentally from clinic visits. A therapist can assess how a patient moves through an actual bathroom, climbs actual stairs, or transfers from an actual bed and toilet. Goals are set around function that matters at home, not abstract benchmarks. There is no waiting room, no driving while painful or weak, and no scheduling around clinic hours. It suits people with limited mobility, no reliable transportation, or caregiving responsibilities that make leaving home difficult.
Elite Home Care accepts physician referrals for physical therapy, occupational therapy, and skilled nursing. Typical physical therapy orders include two to three visits per week for four to eight weeks, though duration depends on the patient's condition and insurance approval.
Cost is determined by insurance coverage and plan structure. Medicare, which covers post-acute home therapy under Part A (skilled nursing facility level of care) and Part B (outpatient therapy with copay), is the primary payer for the agency's patient base. Most patients with Medicare pay nothing per visit if care is ordered immediately after a hospital stay or skilled nursing facility discharge and falls under the home health benefit; copayments apply for certain conditions or if therapy is ordered later. Medicaid coverage varies by plan; some Oklahoma Medicaid plans cover home physical therapy, others do not. Commercial insurance generally covers home therapy with a referral and prior authorization, with patient responsibility ranging from copay to coinsurance depending on the plan. Verify your plan's coverage before scheduling; Elite Home Care can check benefits by insurance name, member ID, and plan.
Out-of-pocket rates for uninsured or out-of-network patients are available upon inquiry but are not published online. Request a cost estimate when you call.
Outpatient clinics like OKC Orthopedic Specialists and Sports + Spine physical therapy centers offer physical therapy in dedicated facilities. These clinics suit patients who are mobile enough to drive, prefer a structured clinical setting with equipment, or need high-frequency appointments (4+ per week). Wait times at major clinics typically range from one to two weeks for new patients.
Elite Home Care suits patients who cannot drive post-surgery, live in areas far from clinic locations, or value one-on-one therapy in their living space. Home therapy is slower to schedule than some clinics (typically 48 hours to one week after physician order, depending on therapist availability and insurance authorization), but the tradeoff is convenience and functional context.
Hospital-based outpatient programs, such as those offered by Mercy and OU Health systems, also provide physical therapy. These suit patients seeking comprehensive post-acute coordination where therapy is part of a larger care team. Home therapy is ideal when the patient wants to stay at home and has already completed acute-care follow-up.
Home therapy works well for people recovering from hip or knee replacement, stroke, or orthopedic injury who are medically stable, have a safe home environment, and either cannot leave home or prefer not to. It also suits older adults with balance concerns or limited transportation. Caregivers benefit from the flexibility of not driving the patient to appointments.
It does not suit patients who need high-intensity equipment (such as pool therapy) or frequent hands-on work by multiple therapists. Patients with an unsafe home (severe clutter, no accessible bathroom, aggressive pets, or active substance use) may find home therapy ineffective. Patients who are acutely unstable or require monitoring beyond therapy scope should complete inpatient or higher-level care first.
After a physician order is received and insurance authorization is obtained, a physical therapist calls to schedule. At the first home visit, the therapist conducts a full assessment: strength, range of motion, balance, gait, and functional activities (stairs, transfers, dressing, bathing). The therapist observes the home layout to identify fall risks and modification opportunities. A treatment plan is written with specific functional goals, and therapy begins that visit or the next. Expect the first appointment to last 45 to 60 minutes; subsequent visits typically run 45 minutes.
Elite Home Care schedules appointments Monday through Friday, typically between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., with some availability on Saturday (verify current Saturday hours when you call). The therapist comes to the patient; no parking is needed. Patients should be home and ready at the scheduled time; rescheduling short notice is discouraged because slots fill quickly. If you receive a physician order, call to initiate authorization and scheduling. Processing usually takes 24 to 48 hours.
Elite Home Care serves Oklahoma City, surrounding suburbs, and rural areas within a reasonable drive radius. Address-specific service area coverage should be confirmed at intake.
Home-based recovery removes one major barrier to completing therapy after serious injury or surgery. For Oklahoma City residents who struggle with mobility or transportation, Elite Home Care makes therapy feasible.
