OKCIC Home › Behavioral & Mental Health
Patients can receive services for a variety of issues, including general wellness, depression, anxiety, trauma, abuse, substance use or breaking negative family cycles. At OKCIC, all behavioral health services are free and emphasize Native cultures and traditions.
New patients interested in behavioral health services can conveniently complete intake screenings online. These screenings are essential for ensuring patients are connected to the appropriate services. Please select the appropriate screening form below for the patient applying.
Empower Hour: Teen LGBTQ+ Support Group
Family Circle Group
Grief Group
Medicine Wheel Group
Red Road to Wellbriety
2SLGBTQIA Adult Support Group
Therapy Assistance Online (TAO) offers over 150 brief and effective educational sessions, covering more than 50 common topics and skills related to mental health, wellness, and substance use issues. These interactive sessions include mindfulness exercises and practice tools, all designed to assist you in achieving your goals. Click the link below to register for TAO and visit the FAQ section below if you are experiencing difficulties registering.
QPR Training
Question. Persuade. Refer.
Just as people trained in CPR and the Heimlich Maneuver help save thousands of lives each year, people trained in QPR learn how to recognize the warning signs of a suicide crisis and how to question, persuade, and refer someone to help. Please join your colleagues who have completed this training and help prevent suicide.
To sign up, contact destini.s@okcic.com
End Opioid Overdose
As part of OKCIC’s prevention efforts, we are passionate about making sure anyone who is affected by opioid use disorder has access to naloxone (also known by the brand name Narcan).
Naloxone is a prescription medicine that reverses an opioid overdose by temporarily bumping opioids off their receptors. It cannot be used to get high and is not addictive. Naloxone is safe and effective; emergency medical professionals have used it for decades.
Surgeon General Jerome M. Adams is urging more Americans to keep naloxone on hand and learn how to use it to save lives in the first national public health advisory in thirteen years.
Bottom line: it saves lives.
To sign up for a training to receive Narcan, please contact (405) 948-4900 ext. 610.
For more information about substance or alcohol use prevention, receive educational packet or local resources for detox and inpatient treatment, please contact (405) 948-4900 ext. 610.
Please view the below video for additional instructions:
If you feel you are experiencing a mental health emergency or thinking of harming yourself or someone else, please call 911 or call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 988, or to reach the Youth Crisis Mobile Response team 24 hours a day, call toll free 1-833-885-2273 (CARE).
You may also call or present to the Oklahoma County Crisis Center at (405) 522-8100 located at 2625 General Pershing Blvd, Oklahoma City or 1200 NE 13th Street, Oklahoma City. You can also text the Crisis Textline at 741-741 by texting the word “Connect”.
If you need immediate assistance following violence, please call the domestic violence hotline at 1-800-799-SAFE (7223).
If you are a patient with an urgent need, an on-call counselor is available during regular business hours, Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. – 5 p.m.
5208 W. Reno Ave.
Oklahoma City, OK 73127
OKCIC patients of all ages are eligible for Behavioral Health’s services.
People who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender (LGBT) are members of every community. They are diverse, come from all walks of life, and include people of all races and ethnicities, all ages, all socioeconomic statuses, and from all parts of the United States. The perspectives and needs of LGBT people should be routinely considered in public health efforts to improve the overall health of every person and eliminate health disparities.
In addition to considering the needs of LGBT people in programs designed to improve the health of entire communities, there is also a need for culturally competent medical care and prevention services that are specific to this population. Social inequality is often associated with poorer health status, and sexual orientation has been associated with multiple health threats. Members of the LGBT community are at increased risk for a number of health threats when compared to their heterosexual peers [1-5]. Differences in sexual behavior account for some of these disparities, but others are associated with social and structural inequities, such as the stigma and discrimination that LGBT populations experience.
These pages provide information and resources on some of the health issues and inequities affecting LGBT communities. Links to other information sources and resources are also provided. Some of this information is designed for members of the general public. Other information has been developed for health care providers, public health professionals, and public health students.
If you are a transgender patient and need assistance navigating through the health system, don’t hesitate to get in touch with us at (405) 948-4900 ext. 469.
5208 W. Reno Ave.
Oklahoma City, OK 73127
(405) 948-4900 ext. 610
Suicide and Crisis Lifeline: 988
Hours:
By appointment only
4913 W. Reno Ave.
Oklahoma City, OK 73127
(405) 948-4900 ext. 263
Hours:
309 S. Ann Arbor Ave.
Oklahoma City, OK 73128
(405) 948-4900 ext. 390
Hours:
5208 W. Reno Ave.
Oklahoma City, OK 73127
(405) 948-4900
Hours:
309 S. Ann Arbor Ave.
Oklahoma City, OK 73128
(405) 948-4900 ext. 217 & 687
Hours:
5208 W. Reno Ave.
Oklahoma City, OK 73127
(405) 948-4900 ext. 618
Hours:
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