Specialist care where Oklahoma audiology falls short.
If you're in Oklahoma and have been living with tinnitus, sound sensitivity, or an auditory processing difference that no one has been able to properly address — you haven't exhausted your options. You've just exhausted the general ones. Auditory Pathway is telehealth-first, requires no referral, and brings full specialist care to wherever you are in the state.
The Reality of Specialist Care in Oklahoma
Outside of the major metro areas, specialist audiology in Oklahoma is thin on the ground — and even within Oklahoma City and Tulsa, the conditions that bring most patients here simply aren't what those clinics are built for. The patients we see have usually already made the trip: driven an hour each way for a normal audiogram, been told to download an app for their tinnitus, or waited months for a referral that led nowhere. That's the gap the telehealth model was built for.
6+ Months
Typical wait for an APD evaluation in Oklahoma. Auditory Pathway: usually within two weeks.
0 Commute
Sessions run from your home, on a laptop, on a schedule that works around your life — not the clinic's.
100%
Of clinical time spent on tinnitus, sound sensitivity, and adult APD. This is not a sub-speciality squeezed between hearing-aid fittings.
Five specialized pathways
for the conditions
most clinics overlook.
Every program begins with a real evaluation—not a five-minute screen. Each links to a dedicated page where you can explore what to expect, how it works, and what it costs.

From clinic frustration to a practice that actually listens.
For most of her clinical career, Dr. Kaitlyn Lepore watched the same scene repeat itself. A patient walks in describing real, life-altering symptoms — a ringing that won't stop, sounds that feel physically painful, conversations that scramble in noisy rooms. The hearing test runs for ten minutes, the audiogram comes back roughly normal, and the patient is sent home with nothing more than "there's nothing more we can do."
“The line we kept giving people was that the test was clear, so there wasn’t much to do. That was never true. We just weren’t set up to test the right thing — or to spend the time treating it.” — Dr. Lepore
Auditory Pathway was built on the understanding that hearing healthcare is about more than devices — and that too many people are living with conditions that can be genuinely improved. It was built to be the practice that appointment should have led to. Because the patients sent home with nothing weren't out of options. They were just in the wrong room.
Au.D
ASHA CCC-A
Irish Academy of Audiology