Emergency Resources

EMResource

This simple interface is your finger-on-the-pulse for the status of emergency departments across the state.

Oklahoma’s Largest Hospitals (Total Hospital Beds) 2023 Data

  1. St. Francis Hospital – Main, Tulsa: 1112 Beds
  2. OU Medical Center – Main, Oklahoma City: 944 Beds
  3. INTEGRIS Baptist Medical Center, Oklahoma City: 892 Beds
  4. SSM St. Anthony’s Hospital – Main, Oklahoma City: 781 Beds
  5. Ascension St. John’s Medical Center – Main, Tulsa: 677 Beds
  6. Hillcrest Medical Center – Main, Tulsa: 656 Beds
  7. Mercy Hospital – Main, Oklahoma City: 423 Beds
  8. Norman Regional Hospital – Main, Norman: 387 Beds
  9. St. Francis – Muskogee, Muskogee – 320 Beds
  10. INTEGRIS Deaconess, Oklahoma City – 291 Beds
  11. Comanche County Memorial Hospital, Lawton – 265 Beds
  12. Oklahoma Children’s Hospital, Oklahoma City – 246 Beds
Location Map for Emergency Physicians

Quickly find the facility you require. Search by trauma designation, beds, specialties, location and more.

Oklahoma’s Busiest Emergency Departments

2023 Data | Fixed Beds only; hall beds not included

1. St. Francis Hospital – Main, Tulsa
ED Beds – 88
ED Annual Volume – 105,000

2. Cherokee Nation W. W. Hastings Hospital, Tahlequah
ED Beds – 30
ED Annual Volume – 73,000

3. INTEGRIS Southwest Medical Center, Oklahoma City
ED Beds – 34
ED Annual Volume – 67,600

4. INTEGRIS Baptist Medical Center, Oklahoma City
ED Beds – 35
ED Annual Volume – 65,000

5. Chickasaw Nation Medical Center, Ada
ED Beds – 28
ED Annual Volume – 63,900

6. Norman Regional Hospital – Main, Norman
ED Beds – 38
ED Annual Volume 60,000

7. Hillcrest Medical Center – Main, Tulsa
ED Beds – 37
ED Annual Volume – 57,000

8. Comanche County Memorial Hospital, Lawton
ED Beds – 36
ED Annual Volume – 55,000

9. SSM St. Anthony’s Hospital, Oklahoma City
ED Beds – 36
ED Annual Volume – 52,000

10. Mercy Hospital – Main, Oklahoma City
ED Beds – 28
ED Annual Volume – 52,000

11. OU Medical Center, Oklahoma City
ED Beds – 52
ED Annual Volume – 50,000

12. St. Johns Medical Center, Tulsa
ED Beds – 33
ED Annual Volume – 48,000

13. Oklahoma Children’s Hospital at OU Medical Center, Oklahoma City
ED Beds – 28
ED Annual Volume – 47,000

14. Norman Regional Healthplex, Norman
ED Beds – 17
ED Annual Volume 42,000

15. Stillwater Medical Center – Main, Stillwater
ED Beds – 15
ED Annual Volume 35,000

Primary Oklahoma Trauma Centers (2023)

Level I

OU Medical Center, Oklahoma City

Level II

Ascension St. John Medical Center, Tulsa
INTEGRIS Baptist Medical Center, Oklahoma City
St. Francis Hospital, Tulsa
Oklahoma Children’s Hospital, Oklahoma City

Level I Trauma Centers: 1
Level II Trauma Centers: 4
Level III Trauma Centers: 27
Level IV Trauma Centers: 86

Interventional and Comprehensive Stroke Services in Oklahoma

OU Medical Center, Oklahoma City
St. Francis Hospital – Main, Tulsa
INTEGRIS Baptist Hospital, Oklahoma City
INTEGRIS Southwest Medical Center, Oklahoma City
Hillcrest Medical Center – Main, Tulsa
Mercy Hospital – Main, Oklahoma City
Ascension St. John Medical Center, Tulsa
Hillcrest Hospital – South, Tulsa
Alliance Health Durant, Durant
Alliance Health – Woodward, Woodward
Comanche County Memorial Hospital, Lawton

Cardiac Cath Lab Services

AllianceHealth Durant, Durant
Ascension St. John Jane Phillips, Bartlesville
Ascension St. John Medical Center, Tulsa
Comanche County Memorial Hospital, Lawton
Duncan Regional Hospital, Duncan
Hillcrest Hospital Claremore, Claremore
Hillcrest Hospital South, Tulsa
Hillcrest Medical Center, Tulsa
INTEGRIS Baptist Medical Center, Oklahoma City
INTEGRIS Bass Baptist Health Center, Enid
INTEGRIS Grove Hospital, Grove
INTEGRIS Health Edmond, Edmond
INTEGRIS Southwest Medical Center, Oklahoma City
McAlester Regional Health Center, McAlester
Mercy Hospital Ardmore, Ardmore
Mercy Hospital Oklahoma City, Oklahoma City
Norman Regional Healthplex, Norman
Oklahoma Heart Hospital South, Oklahoma City
Oklahoma State University Medical Center, Tulsa
OU Health – Edmond Medical Center, Edmond
University of Oklahoma Medical Center, Oklahoma City
Saint Francis Hospital Muskogee, Muskogee
Saint Francis Hospital South, Tulsa
Saint Francis Hospital, Tulsa
SSM Health St. Anthony Hospital – Midwest, Midwest City
SSM Health St. Anthony Hospital – Shawnee, Shawnee
SSM Health St. Anthony Hospital – Oklahoma City, Oklahoma City
St. Mary’s Regional Medical Center, Enid
Stillwater Medical Center, Stillwater

Mental Health & Substance Abuse Resources

Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services (ODMHSAS)

Inpatient Hospitals

Children’s Recovery Center, Norman
Griffin Memorial Hospital,Norman
Oklahoma Forensic Center, Vinita
Transitions Recovery Center, Vinita
Tulsa Center for Behavioral Health (TCBH),Tulsa

Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics

Carl Albert Community Mental Health Center, McAlester
Central Oklahoma Community Mental Health Center, Norman
Jim Taliaferro Community Mental Health Center, Lawton
Northwest Center for Behavioral Health, Woodward

Crisis Stabilization Units

Oklahoma County Crisis Intervention Center, Oklahoma City
Oklahoma Crisis Recovery Unit, Oklahoma City

Other Major Mental Health Facilities

Laureate Psychiatric Clinic, Tulsa
Red Rock Behavioral Health Services, Oklahoma City
Oakwood Springs, Oklahoma City
Rolling Hills Hospital, Ada
Brookhaven Hospital, Tulsa
Parkside Psychiatric Hospital, Tulsa
Cedar Ridge Behavioral Hospital – Bethany, Oklahoma City
Willow Crest Hospital, Miami
Integris Mental Health, Spencer
Deaconess Mental Health Services, Oklahoma City
OU Health – Autumn Life Behavioral Center (Geriatric), Edmond
SSM Health Behavioral Health, Edmond
Southern Plains Treatment Services, Norman
Integris Health Decisions Mental Health and Addiction Recovery Program, Oklahoma City

Emergency Maternal Fetal Medicine Services

OU Medical Center – Oklahoma City
Warren Clinic Maternal Fetal Medicine (St. Francis Hospital) – Tulsa
Mercy Hospital Maternal Fetal Medicine – Oklahoma City
The Perinatal Center Maternal Fetal Medicine – OKC, Tulsa, Norman

Oklahoma Pediatric ICUs (PICUs)

Oklahoma Children’s Hospital – Oklahoma City
The Children’s Hospital at St. Francis – Tulsa
INTEGRIS Baptist Hospital – Oklahoma City

Oklahoma Neonatal ICUs (NICUs)

Oklahoma Children’s Hospital – Level IV – Oklahoma City
The Children’s Hospital at St. Francis – Level IV – Tulsa
INTEGRIS Baptist Hospital – Level III – Oklahoma City
Mercy Hospital – Main – Level III – Oklahoma City
Ascension St. John Medical Center – Level III – Tulsa
Heimerich Women’s Center at Hillcrest Medical Center – Level III – Tulsa
Norman Regional Hospital – Level III – Norman
Comanche County Memorial Hospital – Level II – Lawton
St. Anthony Hospital – Level II – Oklahoma City
INTEGRIS Health Edmond – Level II – Edmond
INTEGRIS Health Canadian Valley – Level II – Yukon
Norman Regional – Level II – Moore
Lakeside Women’s Hospital – Level II – Oklahoma City
INTEGRIS Bass Baptist Medical Center – Level II – Enid

Oklahoma Burn Centers

INTEGRIS Baptist Medical Center – Paul Silverstein Burn Center, Oklahoma City
Hillcrest Medical Center – Alexander Burn Center, Tulsa

Emergency Hyperbaric Chamber Services

(Diving Injuries / Decompression Sickness)

INTEGRIS Baptist Medical Center – Oklahoma City
OSU Center for Aerospace and Hyperbaric Medicine – Tulsa

Critical Access Hospitals

These emergency departments are federally subsidized to keep their doors open, allowing emergency medicine access for rural Oklahomans across the state.

Arbuckle Memorial Hospital Authority, Sulphur
Ascension St. John Nowata, Nowata
Ascension St. John Sapulpa, Sapulpa
Atoka County Medical Center, Atoka
Beaver County Memorial Hospital, Beaver
Carnegie Tri-County Municipal Hospital, Carnegie
Cimarron Memorial Hospital, Boise City
Cleveland Area Hospital, Cleveland
Coal County General Hospital, Coalgate
Cordell Memorial Hospital, Cordell
Creek Nation Community Hospital (Tribal / non-IHS Hospital), Okemah
Drumright Regional Hospital, Drumright
Eastern Oklahoma Medical Center, Poteau
Fairfax Community Hospital, Fairfax
Fairview Regional Medical Center Authority, Fairview
Harmon Memorial Hospital, Hollis
Harper County Community Hospital, Buffalo
Haskell Regional Hospital, Stigler
Hillcrest Hospital Henryetta, Henryetta
Hillcrest Medical Center, Tulsa
Holdenville General Hospital, Holdenville
Jefferson County Hospital, Waurika
Mangum Regional Medical Center, Mangum
McCurtain Memorial Hospital, Idabel
Memorial Hospital of Texas County Authority, Guymon
Mercy Health Love County, Marietta
Mercy Hospital Healdton, Healdton
Mercy Hospital Kingfisher, Kingfisher
Mercy Hospital Logan County, Guthrie
Mercy Hospital Tishomingo, Tishomingo
Mercy Hospital Watonga, Watonga
Newman Memorial Hospital, Shattuck
Okeene Municipal Hospital, Okeene
Prague Regional Memorial Hospital, Prague
Roger Mills Memorial Hospital, Cheyenne
Saint Francis Hospital, Tulsa
Seiling Municipal Hospital, Selling
Share Medical Center, Alva
Stroud Regional Medical Center, Stroud
The Physicians’ Hospital in Anadarko, Anadarko
Weatherford Regional Hospital, Weatherford

Oklahoma Emergency Medicine Residency Programs

University of Oklahoma Department of Emergency Medicine, Tulsa

Originally established 1982 at OU Medical Center in Oklahoma City. Reestablished in 2007 in Tulsa

INTEGRIS Southwest Medical Center Emergency Medicine Residency

Oklahoma City | Established in 1985

Oklahoma State University Medical Center Emergency Medicine Residency

Tulsa | Established in 1991

Norman Regional Hospital Emergency Medicine Residency

Norman | Established in 2015

Comanche County Memorial Hospital Emergency Medicine Residency

Lawton | Established in 2014

Contribute to Our Map & Demographic Study

This map and demographic study it represents are a collaborative effort. The more we know about your facility, the better we can represent it for everyone in the emergency medicine field. If you are an ED director, Assistant ED Director or a physician working in an ER around Oklahoma, please take 5-10 minutes to help add to the study and knowledge about Oklahoma Emergency Departments.

Native American Emergency Departments

Native American Health Facilities across the United States are classified by the I/T/U system.
I – Indian Health Service (100% Federal Government Funded).
T – Tribal (Partial Federal Government with tribal subsidies and private insurance (PI) for more robust care). Ability to have a tribal hospital depends on widely disparate tribal resources.
U – Urban Health Clinics (Mix of Federal Government/PI/donations/fund raising).

Cherokee Nation W.W. Hastings Hospital, Tahlequah (Tribal)
Chickasaw Nation Medical Center, Ada. (Tribal)
Choctaw Nation Health Care Center, Talihina (Tribal)
Muskogee Creek Nation Community Hospital, Okemah (Tribal)
Muskogee Creek Nation Medical Center, Okmulgee (Tribal)
Lawton Indian Hospital, Lawton (IHS)
Claremore Indian Hospital, Claremore (IHS)

Oklahoma Military Treatment Facilities

In years past, there were Four Full-Service Military Treatment Facilities with Emergency Departments in Oklahoma. They have all closed due to federal budget cuts to the Defense Health Agency, but are listed here and still provide follow up for military members and dependents seen at civilian emergency departments.

97th Medical Group – Altus Air Force Base
72nd Medical Group – Tinker Air Force Base
71st Medical Group – Vance Air Force Base
Reynolds Army Health Clinic, Fort Sill

Oklahoma Veteran’s Medical Center Emergency Departments

Oklahoma City VA Medical Center, Oklahoma City
Jack C. Montgomery VA Medical Center, Muskogee

Non-Emergency Follow-Up VA Clinics

Ada VA Clinic, Ada
Altus VA Clinic, Atlus
Ardmore VA Clinic, Ardmore
Blackwell VA Clinic, Blackwell
Clinton VA Clinic, Clinton
Enid VA Clinic, Enid
Fourteenth Street VA Clinic, Oklahoma City
Lawton North VA Clinic, Fort Sill
Lawton VA Clinic, Fort Sill
Norman VA Clinic, Norman
North May VA Clinic, Oklahoma City
North Oklahoma City VA Clinic, Oklahoma City
Shawnee VA Clinic, Shawnee
South Oklahoma City VA Clinic, Oklahoma City
Stillwater VA Clinic, Stillwater
Tinker VA Clinic, Stillwater
Yukon VA Clinic, Yukon
Jack C. Montgomery Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Muskogee
Bartlesville VA Clinic, Bartlesville
Ernest Childers Department of Veteran Affairs Outpatient Clinic, Tulsa
McAlester VA Clinic, McAlester
McCurtain County VA Clinic, Idabel
Muskogee East VA Clinic, Muskogee
Tulsa Eleventh Street VA Clinic, Tulsa
Yale Avenue VA Clinic, Tulsa
Claremore VA Clinic, Claremore

 

MIPS Primer for Emergency Physicians

The Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) is an incentive program established by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) as a part of the Quality Payment Program (QPP) to provide financial rewards for clinicians who deliver high-quality, value-based care to Medicare beneficiaries.

Medical Student Workers

These tenacious young OSU medical students were instrumental in collecting and organizing data for our Oklahoma ED demographic study. OCEP is very proud and thankful for their fantastic work!

Paula Tran

Paula Tran

Oklahoma State University COM MSIV

Learn More

Paula Tran is a fourth-year medical student at Oklahoma State University College of Osteopathic Medicine and plans to pursue a residency in General Surgery. She was a part of Student Government Association as Vice President and Campus Student Ambassador and had the opportunity to work with the Student Life Office and more than 40 clubs to organize schedules and execute events. During her free time, she worked with different faculty members to research 3D modeling of the head/neck using MRI scans, comparative anatomy of Wormian bones in different species, and physician education on substance user disorder. During her free time in medical school, she enjoys playing the piano, sewing clothes, and watching older re-runs of Project Runway.

Bailey Wiggins

Bailey Wiggins

Oklahoma State University COM MSIV

Learn More

Bailey Wiggins is a current fourth year medical student at Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences. She is also an active member of the American College of Osteopathic Emergency Physicians and has participated in research projects that serve to further the knowledge of Graduate Medical Education. Her latest project focused on evaluating the need for increased Graduate Medical education training opportunities located in Indian Health Service facilities or tribal clinics within American Indian and Alaskan Native communities. Bailey is eager to finish her final two years of medical school and pursue a career as an Emergency Medicine physician, where she plans to continue advocating for patients and osteopathic physicians and students following medical school graduation.

McKenzi Ormsbee

McKenzi Ormsbee

Oklahoma State University COM MSIV

Learn More

McKenzi Ormsbee is a fourth-year medical student at Oklahoma State University College of Osteopathic Medicine and will graduate in 2024. She completed her undergraduate studies at the University of Oklahoma, graduating summa cum laude with a degree in Chemical Biosciences and a minor in Medical Humanities. Additionally, she pursued a Certificate of Public Health at Oklahoma State University to deepen her understanding of social disparities in healthcare. McKenzi is passionate about pursuing a career in emergency medicine due to the diverse range of patients she can help every day. Outside of her academic and hospital commitments, she enjoys exploring new restaurants in Tulsa and attending concerts with her friends.

Resource Data in our lists and interactive maps were provided in a survey of the respective ED department directors and staff throughout Oklahoma.

Many OCEP members are available as speakers and media contacts. If you’re interested, please email our Executive Director, Gabe Graham.

Membership

The first step in joining the Oklahoma Chapter of the American College of Emergency Physicians is to join ACEP. But before that, why not check out some of the benefits of being a member?