Accel At Crystal Park is a 60-bed inpatient rehabilitation facility in Oklahoma City specializing in neurological and orthopedic recovery for patients transitioning from acute hospital care. The center accepts Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurance, operating as part of the Accel Health network. It serves patients who need intensive therapy but have moved beyond acute medical crisis, functioning as a bridge between hospital discharge and home or lower-level care.
Accel At Crystal Park provides skilled nursing care combined with daily rehabilitation therapy. Patients are medically monitored around the clock while undergoing physical, occupational, and speech therapy tailored to their diagnosis. The facility handles post-stroke recovery, spinal cord and brain injury rehabilitation, orthopedic surgery recovery (hip, knee, shoulder), and neurological conditions including Parkinson's disease and multiple sclerosis. Stays typically last 10 to 30 days, though length varies by patient progress and insurance coverage.
Unlike long-term care facilities, rehabilitation centers here function as high-intensity therapy environments where goals focus on functional recovery and return to the community. Unlike acute hospitals, they do not handle emergency care, imaging, or surgery. Unlike assisted living facilities, they provide skilled nursing and multiple daily therapy sessions. The distinction matters: patients need a physician referral and must require daily medical monitoring and at least two therapy disciplines to qualify for inpatient rehab.
Patients receive physical therapy (movement, strength, balance), occupational therapy (self-care, adaptive strategies, return-to-work skills), and speech-language pathology (swallowing, cognitive recovery, communication). Most patients attend three hours of structured therapy per day, split across morning and afternoon sessions. Nursing staff manage medications, wound care, and catheter management. A physiatrist (rehabilitation physician) oversees the treatment plan.
Accel At Crystal Park also offers cognitive rehabilitation and music therapy as adjunctive services, though frequency varies by individual insurance authorization. Nutritionists assess swallowing and dietary needs. Psychology or social work staff address emotional adjustment and discharge planning. Family education is built into the program; therapists teach caregivers how to assist with transfers, exercises, and safety at home.
Pricing is primarily insurance-driven. Medicare pays a per-diem rate determined by diagnosis and comorbidities, typically ranging from $600 to $1,000 per day. Medicaid rates vary by state agreement, generally lower. Private insurance plans and out-of-pocket rates require direct inquiry with the facility's business office, as they depend on negotiated contracts and individual policies. Most patients do not pay directly at discharge; billing flows through insurance and any patient responsibility is settled afterward.
Oklahoma City has several inpatient rehabilitation settings. Integris Rehabilitation Hospital and OU Medicine's rehabilitation program are larger, system-affiliated facilities with broader specialty tracks and longer histories in the region. Both accept the same insurance types. The meaningful difference: Accel At Crystal Park operates with 60 beds, allowing smaller patient-to-staff ratios in certain therapeutic areas. Integris and OU facilities often have shorter wait times for admission due to higher bed count, but may run busier therapy schedules. For neurological cases, OU has a dedicated stroke and neurosurgical recovery track; Accel At Crystal Park emphasizes general neuro and orthopedic cases.
Choosing between them depends on diagnosis and timing. Stroke patients with acute medical complexity may benefit from OU's integrated neurosurgery proximity. Orthopedic post-op patients recover well at any of the three; Accel At Crystal Park's smaller size can mean more personalized daily therapy. For Medicare patients with tight discharge timelines, the facility with the shortest waitlist (usually a day-by-day question) drives the decision, as your acute hospital bed is holding cost.
Accel At Crystal Park suits patients aged 18 and older recovering from a clear acute event (stroke, orthopedic surgery, spinal injury) who are medically stable enough to tolerate three hours of therapy daily. It serves people with insurance covering inpatient rehab (Medicare Part A, most Medicaid plans, many commercial plans). It suits families wanting daily access in a concentrated therapy setting before heading home.
It is not appropriate for patients requiring 24-hour nursing (though skilled nursing is available, the focus is therapy). It is not a long-term care facility for patients with no discharge goal. It does not admit patients whose primary need is companionship or medication management without active rehabilitation potential. Patients with untreated acute infection, uncontrolled psychiatric conditions, or severe dementia without rehabilitation goals are typically screened out or referred elsewhere.
Admission begins with a physician referral, usually from your acute care hospital discharge team or primary care doctor. The facility performs a phone screening with a nurse and physiatrist to confirm diagnosis, medical stability, and therapy candidacy. If approved, a pre-admission assessment includes chart review and sometimes a brief in-person evaluation. Most admissions occur within one to three days of referral.
On arrival, you will check in at the front desk, receive a room assignment (semi-private and private rooms are available; private rooms cost more out-of-pocket), and meet your nursing and therapy teams. An occupational therapist will assess your home setup; a physical therapist will evaluate your mobility; a speech pathologist may assess swallowing if relevant. A physiatrist will review your medical history and set initial therapy goals. First-day orientation includes room safety, call-bell use, meal schedule, therapy times, and family visiting hours. Therapy typically begins the next morning.
Accel At Crystal Park is located at 3600 NW 56th Street, Oklahoma City. Inpatient rehabilitation operates 24/7 for resident care; therapy hours are generally 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, with limited Saturday therapy depending on clinical need. Sunday is a light therapy day. Visiting hours are typically 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily, but confirm current policy when admitted, as restrictions vary.
Parking is on-site and free. Public transportation via METRO is available but limited to nearby stops; most visitors drive. The location is northwest of downtown Oklahoma City, roughly 15 minutes from downtown via North Portland Avenue or NW 50th Street.
Accel At Crystal Park fills a direct role in Oklahoma City's rehabilitation pipeline, handling the concentrated recovery phase that sits between acute hospital care and community reentry, with a structure and focus that distinction serves clearly.
