Pain Management Clinic in Freer, TX
Hot semi-arid South Texas climate.
For pain management clinic, the service area covers roughly 75 miles from central Freer.
Common reasons to call
- Chronic back, neck, or joint pain
- Sciatica, nerve pain, or radiculopathy
- Pain after auto accident or work injury
- Injection consultation
- Medication management question
- Failed conservative care
- Need imaging review and treatment options
- Referral from primary care, chiropractor, or physical therapist
Typical work
- Pain history, exam, and records review
- Imaging review and diagnosis discussion
- Medication plan within clinic policy
- Injection or procedure consultation
- Physical therapy, chiropractic, or surgical referral coordination
- Workers compensation or injury documentation where accepted
- Follow-up care plan and monitoring
Typical turnaround
New patient visits depend on referral needs, records, insurance authorization, imaging, and clinic scheduling. Urgent neurologic symptoms should be handled through emergency or medical care first.
Materials and equipment
- Medical exam room equipment
- Imaging reports and records review tools
- Procedure room supplies where injections are offered
- Medication monitoring forms and patient agreements where used
- Referral and prior authorization documentation
- Electronic medical record system
Job sizes
Minor
Records review, follow-up, or focused medication consult
Standard
Initial evaluation with imaging review and conservative care plan
Major
Procedure planning, injection series, complex medication management, or injury documentation
Replacement
Multi-specialty pain program, surgical referral coordination, or long-term monitored care
Final pricing comes from the on-call provider after on-site assessment, with a written estimate before any work starts.
What to expect
- ✓Texas Medical Board licensed physicians
- ✓TMB pain management clinic certificate where Chapter 168 applies
- ✓Records, imaging, and medication history reviewed before care plan
- ✓Emergency red flags referred to urgent medical care
Texas physician license, TMB pain management clinic certificate where required, board certification in anesthesiology, physical medicine and rehabilitation, neurology, or pain medicine where applicable, DEA registration where controlled substances are prescribed.
Common questions
Are pain clinics regulated in Texas?
Yes. Texas Medical Board certifies pain management clinics when Chapter 168 applies, and physicians must hold Texas medical licenses.
Do I need a referral?
Sometimes. Insurance, clinic policy, and the type of pain problem decide that. Bring records, imaging reports, medication list, and prior treatment history.
Will the clinic prescribe pain medicine?
Maybe, but do not assume. Pain clinics set their own policies and follow state and federal rules. Many use imaging review, therapy, injections, and monitoring before or instead of medication.
What symptoms need emergency care?
New weakness, loss of bladder or bowel control, fever with severe back pain, chest pain, or sudden severe neurologic symptoms should not wait for a clinic appointment.
Can pain management help sciatica?
Often. The provider reviews the exam, imaging, and history to decide whether therapy, medication, injection, or surgical referral is appropriate.
Do you take auto accident cases?
Some clinics do. Ask about insurance, letters of protection, records, imaging, and coordination with attorneys or other providers before scheduling.
Coastal Bend seasons
Spring (March - May)
Activity increases can flare back, neck, and joint pain.
Summer (June - August)
Travel, fishing, and physical work can aggravate chronic pain.
Fall (September - November)
Back-to-school and work routines bring posture and repetitive strain complaints.
Winter (December - February)
Cold fronts and holiday travel often worsen joint and spine pain.