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INTEGRIS Health Paul Silverstein Burn Center

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The INTEGRIS Health Paul Silverstein Burn Center provides comprehensive care for burn victims, including inpatient and outpatient care, and emergent hyperbaric oxygen therapy. Our team continually advances technology and research to enhance patient care.

Woman sitting in a hyperbaric chamber

Treatments

Click an item below to learn more about the services and treatments provided at the INTEGRIS Health Paul Silverstein Burn Center.

Burn patients may require surgery. Common procedures include debridement and skin grafting. Patients and families receive education on surgical procedures, anesthesia types, blood loss, donor sites, dressings, splints, pain, scarring and post-op activities. A burn team member is always available to answer questions and provide further details.

Used in the treatment of compromised skin grafts and flaps, carbon monoxide poisoning, decompression sickness, gas emboli and chronic wounds.

In 1989, INTEGRIS Health Baptist Medical Center was Oklahoma's first hospital to have a hyperbaric chamber, which could only treat one patient at time.

In March 1995, they installed the state's largest chamber, treating up to 12 patients. Over 500 patients, aged five months to 92 years, have been treated in this chamber.

Providing both pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions, including IV and oral medications, moderate sedation, nitrous oxide therapy and diversion therapy with the use of virtual reality headsets.

As the only pediatric burn center in Oklahoma, we provide comprehensive care and reconstruction, ensuring personalized and effective treatment for every child.

Wound care is vital in burn treatment. The objective is to remove the burned tissue (eschar) so the skin can regenerate itself or prepare the wound for skin grafts. Physicians use various topical creams and techniques.

We provide specialized wound dressings for complex burns and infection prevention practices to prevent sepsis in an already vulnerable patient.