
Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs — Brooklyn, NY
Brighter Pathways Brooklyn • 1007 Quentin Road • Brooklyn, NY 11223
SAMHSA 24/7 Helpline: 1-800-662-4357
Mailing Address
1007 Quentin Road
Brooklyn, New York 11223
Phone Lines
Front desk: 718-998-3235
Hours of Operation
Hours not posted — call the facility to confirm availability
Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs
1007 Quentin Road, Brooklyn, NY 11223
Inside Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs — Detox Care
Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs operates the Brighter Pathways program in Brooklyn, NY, holding outpatient detoxification and continuing outpatient space for adolescents and children working through substance use alongside co-occurring serious mental health concerns, including serious emotional disturbance. Buprenorphine and naltrexone tracks are folded into the schedule, and the clinical work draws on anger management, brief intervention, cognitive behavioral therapy, motivational interviewing, and contingency-based incentives. Distinct tracks stay open for adolescents, adult men, adult women, clients carrying trauma histories, and those with co-occurring conditions. As a long-standing nonprofit rooted in New York's communal-service tradition, the Jewish Board keeps the program steady — screenings, hepatitis testing, HIV testing, and mental health work all run inside the same plan.
Insurance Plans Honored at Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs
Benefits and acceptance depend on your individual policy. Verify your coverage with admissions before scheduling.
Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs
1007 Quentin Road, Brooklyn, NY 11223
SAMHSA 24/7 Helpline: 1-800-662-4357
Detox & Outpatient Tracks Offered at Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs
| Care Levels | Detoxification, Substance use treatment, Treatment for co-occurring substance use plus either serious mental health illness in adults/serious emotional disturbance in children |
| Treatment Setting | Outpatient, Outpatient detoxification, Outpatient methadone/buprenorphine or naltrexone treatment, Regular outpatient treatment |
| Medications Available | Buprenorphine used in Treatment, Naltrexone used in Treatment |
CBT & Allied Therapies at Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs
Conditions Addressed at Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs
LGBTQ+ Affirming Care at Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs
Counseling at Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs — Family-Inclusive Sessions
On-Site Testing at Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs — HIV & Hepatitis C Screening
House Rules at Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs — Smoke-Free Campus
Paying for Care at Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs — Insurance & Self-Pay
Carriers Accepted
Other Payment Pathways
Plan coverage depends on your individual benefits. Call admissions to confirm what your policy covers and any cost-share before you commit.
Adolescent Intake at Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs
Ages Served
Gender Tracks
Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs — New York Licensed Recovery Center
Full Credential List
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Common Questions About Care at Jewish Board/Family/Child Srvcs
Records on file indicate this program accepts both Medicaid and Medicare. Specific eligibility rules, covered services, and authorization steps differ by state and plan tier. The admissions team can run a benefits check and walk through any cost-share before you schedule.
Medication-assisted treatment (MAT) is offered with Buprenorphine used in Treatment, Naltrexone used in Treatment. These FDA-approved medications ease withdrawal and reduce craving while clients begin therapy. The treating physician sets dosing and the long-term plan based on an individual clinical assessment.
Outpatient care is designed around real life. Sessions are scheduled in evenings, mornings, or partial-day blocks so clients can keep up with work, school, or caregiving while building recovery skills they can apply the same week.
Yes, this site treats adolescents in an age-appropriate program. Teen tracks typically weave in family sessions, academic continuity supports, and developmentally tailored therapy. Admissions can walk parents and guardians through consent requirements and what a typical week of programming covers.
LGBTQ+-affirming care is part of how this program operates. Clinical work attends to the realities of minority stress, family rejection, and discrimination that frequently sit alongside substance use. Staff training emphasizes culturally responsive, respectful care across every level of the program.
Gender-responsive programming gives women space to work on trauma, relationships, and parenting in a setting tailored to their needs. Some sites coordinate childcare or family housing alongside treatment. If pregnancy or postpartum care is part of the picture, ask admissions about pregnancy-safe protocols.
Trauma-informed practice runs through the program. Qualifying clients can access EMDR, somatic experiencing, and trauma-focused CBT alongside the standard clinical track. Staff are trained to recognize trauma responses and to keep the therapeutic environment physically and emotionally safe.
Aftercare planning starts well before discharge. Typical paths include step-down to outpatient services, referrals to sober-living homes, alumni group meetings, and warm hand-offs to community recovery resources. Many programs maintain alumni networks so peer support and accountability continue once formal treatment is complete.
Family counseling runs alongside the primary clinical program. Relatives are invited into education sessions, communication-skills practice, and discharge planning so the family system actively supports recovery rather than undermining it. CRAFT principles can inform how loved ones engage with the person in treatment.
Total cost depends on program length, level of care, and the specific services involved. Most sites can set up payment plans or point to outside financing partners. A confidential call to admissions gets you a tailored cost estimate for your situation rather than a guess based on a generic price sheet.
This site offers general information about addiction treatment centers. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. In a mental health crisis, call 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline) or 911 right away. For substance use guidance, SAMHSA can be reached at 1-800-662-4357.
Records are drawn from the SAMHSA Treatment Locator, state licensing databases, and center submissions.
