Skip to content
Is this your practice? Claim it to add hours, insurance, and make it findable.

Willow Crest HospitalResidential Treatment in Miami, OK

Virtual & In-Person
Licensed in OKAccepts Medicaid, Private Insurance, Tricare +3Virtual & In-Person

Great to meet you

Willow Crest Hospital/Moccasin Bend Ranch is the last inpatient psychiatric hospital in Oklahoma that solely specializes in acute and residential treatment for children and adolescents ages 4-17. Founded in 1979, the facility provides Acute 1, Acute 2, and residential treatment programs in a safe and healing environment. The clinical team includes psychiatrists, physician assistants, pharmacists, registered nurses, social workers, licensed professional counselors, licensed recreational therapists, dietitians, and licensed educators. The facility treats mental health, behavioral health, and substance abuse challenges through individualized treatment plans. Family sessions are a critical component of the program, offered both in-person and via tele-therapy. The facility provides transportation assistance for admission when needed and assists families in locating outpatient providers and medication management services for discharge planning.

Role

Residential Treatment

What a first session looks like

Virtual & In-Person

The intake process begins over-the-phone with the family or referral source, during which the intake team gathers information to determine if the inpatient psychiatric treatment program is appropriate for the child or adolescent before the family makes a trip to the facility. If the patient meets admission criteria, the facility will hold the bed for a reasonable amount of time, and can provide transportation to the facility if needed.

Specialties & focus areas

Recovery focus

Substance use disorder

Co-occurring

DepressionAnxietyTrauma / PTSD

Evidence-based approaches

EMDR

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing. A structured trauma therapy that helps the brain re-file painful memories so they stop hijacking the present.

Play therapy

Play Therapy. The structured equivalent of talk therapy for children, who process feelings through play before they have the language for them. Used for kids in family-affected systems.

Activity therapy

Activity Therapy. Structured therapeutic activities, recreation, movement, hands-on tasks, used as a vehicle for connection and emotional regulation. Often paired with talk therapy in residential and group programs.

Cognitive behavioral therapy

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. Spots the thought-feeling-action loops that fuel urges, then rewires them with practical skills you take into the moment.

Couples/family therapy

Family Therapy. Brings the people closest to the recovery into the room. Less about blame, more about updating the patterns that fed the cycle so the home becomes part of the recovery.

Dialectical behavior therapy

Dialectical Behavior Therapy. Pairs acceptance with change. Especially useful when emotions feel too big to ride out without acting on them.

Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing therapy

A therapeutic approach included in this provider’s plan of care. Contact for specifics on how it shows up in their work.

Group therapy

Group Therapy. A small facilitated circle where people working on similar struggles practice naming what is hard, hearing themselves in others, and learning skills together. The room is the medicine.

Integrated mental and substance use disorder treatment

Integrated Treatment. Treats addiction and co-occurring mental health conditions in the same plan, rather than sequentially. Most clinically effective when both are present.

Individual psychotherapy

Individual Psychotherapy. One-to-one sessions with a licensed clinician. The standard-bearer of mental-health care; most evidence-based plans build around it.

Telemedicine/telehealth therapy

Telehealth Therapy. Real clinical sessions delivered over video. Same evidence base as in-person care for most conditions; meets you where you actually are instead of where the office is.

What this facility offers

Care offered

Treatment type

  • Mental health treatment
  • Treatment for co-occurring substance use plus either serious mental illness (SMI) in adults and/or serious emotional disturbance (SED) in children

Setting

  • Hospital inpatient/24-hour hospital inpatient

Facility

  • Psychiatric hospital

Emergency services

  • Crisis intervention team
  • Psychiatric emergency onsite services
  • Psychiatric emergency walk-in services

How care is delivered

Ancillary services

  • Court-ordered outpatient treatment
  • Family psychoeducation
  • Psychosocial rehabilitation services
  • Suicide prevention services
  • Education services

Who this is for

Age groups served

  • Children/Adolescents
  • Adults

Special programs

  • Clients who have experienced trauma
  • Persons with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
  • Children/adolescents with serious emotional disturbance (SED)
Source: SAMHSA findtreatment.gov · Verify at findtreatment.gov →

Not the right fit?

Browse the rest of the Cope Compass directory.

See more providers

Insurance accepted

MedicaidPrivate insuranceTRICARESelf-Pay / Sliding ScaleIhs/tribal/urban (itu) fundsState welfare or child and family services funds

Session format

Virtual & In-Person

Languages

English

Pricing

Contact for self-pay rates

Most providers respond within 1–2 business days.

Visit their website
Share

Cope Compass does not provide clinical services. Contact providers directly.

Residential Treatment, Willow Crest Hospital