Integrated care for Oklahoma
Empowering Oklahoma health care professionals to treat patients' mental and physical health together.
The Oklahoma Integrated Care Resource Center offers training and practical resources to bring integrated behavioral health care strategies to your clinic thoughtfully and efficiently.

Resource library
Find tools, trainings, and resources for continuing education in our searchable integrated care resource library.

Why integrated care
Understand the evidence for integrating behavioral health into physical health settings.

Get connected
Learn how to get training and technical assistance to bring integrated care to your clinic.
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Latest resources
The newest tools, trainings, and evidence for integrated care strategies, published in our resource library.
Article
Understanding Integrated Behavioral Health Care and the Collaborative Care Model
Through universal screenings for mental health conditions in primary care, integrated care can lead to earlier identification of, and intervention for, mental health and substance use conditions.
Read moreEvidence base
2025 Directory, 2nd Edition: Collaborative Care Service Organizations (CSOs)
A directory of Collaborative Care Service Organizations (CSOs) which provide CoCM implementation support and/or staff to health systems and primary care practices.
Evidence base
Mounting Evidence That Use of the Collaborative Care Model Reduces Total Healthcare Costs
Four CoCM Studies — each involving Kaiser Permanente, Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield, or Independence Blue Cross — demonstrated reductions in Total Healthcare Costs, as soon as within 6 months and for as long as 4 years.
Evidence base
Medical Family Therapy in Rural Community Health: A Longitudinal “Peek” into Integrated Care Successes
Integrated Behavioral Health Care (IBHC) continues to grow as an evidence-based service delivery model adopted by health care systems all over the world to better care for the holistic needs of patients and their families. Medical Family Therapy (MedFT) has offered innovation to IBHC models by delivering biopsychosocial-spiritual (BPS-S), relational, and family-oriented care across a variety of healthcare contexts. This article details a longitudinal review of a program spanning 16 years that grew to a highly integrated operation that embeds MedFTs in a number of rural community health centers. This model highlights the importance of interdisciplinary teams and decision-making metrics for systems that predominately care for underserved and minoritized populations.
