Immediate Care of Oklahoma is a walk-in urgent care clinic operating in Oklahoma City that handles acute injuries, infections, and minor illnesses without requiring an appointment or emergency room admission, positioning itself for patients who need faster care than their primary doctor can offer but not full hospital-level intervention.
The clinic operates as a standalone urgent care facility, separate from any hospital system. This means patients walk in, register, and typically see a provider within 30 to 60 minutes. The setting and staffing differ materially from an emergency room: the facility handles moderate acute issues but does not have the imaging, surgical, or inpatient capacity that a hospital ER does. This model suits people with sprains, lacerations, urinary tract infections, bronchitis, or minor fractures who need same-day evaluation but can leave within an hour or two.
The clinic addresses minor to moderate urgent care: wound repair (lacerations, abrasions), sprains and strains, minor fractures (diagnosis and immobilization), respiratory infections, urinary tract infections, ear and sinus infections, and on-site rapid testing for flu and strep. The facility does not perform advanced imaging (CT, MRI) routinely; most X-rays are available, but complex fractures may be referred to a hospital. The clinic typically does not admit patients for observation or handle severe chest pain, head trauma with loss of consciousness, or multiple injuries.
Pricing operates on a tiered visit fee. A standard visit without testing or imaging costs approximately $150 to $250, depending on the acuity assessment. Rapid testing (flu, strep, COVID-19, urinalysis) adds $25 to $50 per test. Basic X-rays add $75 to $125. Sutures or wound closure add $50 to $100 depending on depth and location. Verify current pricing by calling ahead; these ranges shift with operating costs and insurance contracts, though the clinic accepts most major Oklahoma health plans, including Blue Cross Blue Shield of Oklahoma and most Medicaid HMOs serving the state. Uninsured patients should ask about cash-pay discounts; some urgent care facilities in Oklahoma City negotiate rates for out-of-pocket payers.
Oklahoma City has several competing urgent care venues. MedExpress locations (multiple around the metro area) operate on a similar model: walk-in, minor urgent care, and typically 40-to-60-minute waits. MedExpress charges in a similar range and accepts the same major plans. The operational difference is minor.
FastMed also operates in the Oklahoma City area with comparable services and pricing. Where Immediate Care of Oklahoma may differ is in local staffing continuity and location density; the clinic operates fewer locations than MedExpress or FastMed, which means a patient's choice between them may come down to proximity and hours rather than clinical range.
For comparison: choose a walk-in urgent care (Immediate Care of Oklahoma, MedExpress, or FastMed) for acute but non-life-threatening issues where your primary doctor cannot see you same-day. Choose an ER (like those at OU Medical Center or Mercy Hospital Oklahoma City) for severe chest pain, difficulty breathing, head trauma, or conditions where you cannot wait hours. Choose your primary care doctor for follow-up or ongoing concerns.
This clinic suits working adults and families who need same-day care for acute issues but have no hospital risk. Parents bring children for minor injuries and infections. Patients without primary care doctors use urgent care to fill the gap. The clinic does not suit people with potential heart attacks, strokes, severe allergic reactions, or serious trauma; those belong in an ER. It also does not suit routine preventive care, chronic disease management, or prescriptions that require long-term monitoring. If you have an ongoing condition (diabetes, hypertension, asthma) and need urgent medication refills or advice, your primary care doctor is more suitable; if your doctor is unavailable and the issue is acute (running out of a critical blood pressure medication, for example), urgent care can bridge the gap temporarily.
On arrival, the patient checks in with photo ID and insurance card (or indicates they are uninsured). The front desk collects basic demographics and chief complaint. Triage nurses perform vital signs (blood pressure, heart rate, temperature, oxygen level) and a brief history, typically within 10 minutes. Patients wait in a reception area, and names are called for the provider room in the order they were triaged, not necessarily first-come-first-served. A clinician (physician, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant) evaluates the chief complaint, performs a focused exam, orders any tests or imaging if needed, and discusses results and treatment (medication, rest, elevation, or referral) before checkout. Total time in the clinic averages 60 to 90 minutes for uncomplicated cases; more complex issues or busy periods extend this.
Immediate Care of Oklahoma operates seven days a week with extended hours designed to capture patients outside normal office hours. Standard hours run approximately 8:00 am to 8:00 pm, Monday through Friday, and 9:00 am to 5:00 pm on weekends, though confirm the specific location's hours before arriving. Parking is typically available on-site or directly adjacent; unlike an ER, urgent care does not pull patients into a parking garage, so access is quick. The clinic is walk-in only; no appointments are offered, which lowers barriers to entry but means a 30-to-60-minute wait is normal if the facility is busy (especially during cold and flu season, roughly November through March). Verify hours for your specific location, as operating times can shift.
Immediate Care of Oklahoma fills a genuine gap for Oklahoma City residents who need rapid acute care outside office hours and without ER expense and wait times, making it a practical choice for common urgent-but-not-critical situations.
