
Queens Village Committee for MH — Family Intervention Services in Jamaica, NY
JCAP Inc • 116-30 Sutphin Boulevard • Jamaica, NY 11434
SAMHSA 24/7 Helpline: 1-800-662-4357
Mailing Address
116-30 Sutphin Boulevard
Jamaica, New York 11434
Phone Lines
Front desk: 718-322-2500 x637
Admissions: 718-322-2500 x622
Hours of Operation
Hours not posted — call the facility to confirm availability
Queens Village Committee for MH
116-30 Sutphin Boulevard, Jamaica, NY 11434
Inside Queens Village Committee for MH — Residential Care
Queens Village Committee for MH runs JCAP Inc in Jamaica, NY as a long-term, 24-hour residential home for adult, senior, and young-adult men working through substance use disorders, with deep clinical attention to survivors of intimate-partner violence, sexual abuse, and lasting trauma, and men living with HIV or AIDS. 12-step facilitation, CBT, anger management, brief intervention, and community-reinforcement counseling carry daily clinical life inside the men-only setting. Buprenorphine and naltrexone are dispensed in-network alongside AUD medications. Hepatitis A and B vaccination, hepatitis B and C testing, HIV and STD screening, TB testing, metabolic monitoring, PrEP access, child-care arrangements, vocational training, individual sessions, hepatitis and HIV education, HIV early intervention, mental-health services, and transportation help keep Queens Village Committee for MH grounded in Southeast Queens.
Insurance Plans Honored at Queens Village Committee for MH
Benefits and acceptance depend on your individual policy. Verify your coverage with admissions before scheduling.
Queens Village Committee for MH
116-30 Sutphin Boulevard, Jamaica, NY 11434
SAMHSA 24/7 Helpline: 1-800-662-4357
Residential Tracks Offered at Queens Village Committee for MH
| Care Levels | Substance use treatment |
| Treatment Setting | Long-term residential, Residential/24-hour residential |
| Medications Available | Buprenorphine used in Treatment, Naltrexone used in Treatment |
CBT & Allied Therapies at Queens Village Committee for MH
Conditions Addressed at Queens Village Committee for MH — Alcoholism & More
Specialty Pathways at Queens Village Committee for MH — Veterans Program & More
Counseling at Queens Village Committee for MH — Family-Inclusive Sessions
On-Site Testing at Queens Village Committee for MH — HIV & Hepatitis C Screening
Wraparound Supports & Accommodations at Queens Village Committee for MH
Setting & House Rules at Queens Village Committee for MH
Paying for Care at Queens Village Committee for MH — 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.
Adult & Senior Intake at Queens Village Committee for MH
Ages Served
Gender Tracks
Queens Village Committee for MH — CARF Accredited, New York Licensed
Full Credential List
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Common Questions About Care at Queens Village Committee for MH
Records on file indicate this program accepts Medicaid. 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.
Residential days follow a predictable rhythm: morning wellness and grounding activities, individual therapy, group counseling blocks, educational workshops, and evening peer-recovery meetings. Meals, medication times, and rest periods are built into the schedule. That steady routine helps clients rebuild healthy daily structure — a quiet but important piece of sustained recovery.
The young-adult track focuses on the challenges specific to this stage of life — peer dynamics, identity formation, and the move into independent living. Programming usually pairs traditional addiction therapy with career counseling and practical life-skills work.
A dedicated veterans track addresses combat-related trauma, PTSD, moral injury, and the specific stressors that follow service members into civilian life. Staff who understand military culture deliver the care, and admissions can help coordinate with VA benefits when applicable — call to confirm eligibility specifics.
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.
Family participation tends to strengthen long-term recovery outcomes. This program may run family therapy sessions, educational workshops, scheduled visitation, family weekends, or multi-family groups. The specifics differ by site, so admissions can describe the exact family programming and how relatives can plug in.
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.
Yes — intervention support is part of what this site offers. A trained interventionist or educational consultant can guide a family through a structured conversation designed to help a loved one in active addiction accept treatment. Recognized models such as the Johnson Model, ARISE, and Love First inform the approach. Pre-meeting coaching, the day-of conversation, and a same-day admission pathway are coordinated together so momentum isn’t lost.
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.
On-site child care is provided so parents can attend counseling, group sessions, and medical appointments without scrambling for outside coverage. The team can describe hours of operation, age ranges accepted, and how childcare is coordinated against the daily treatment schedule.
Transportation assistance is part of the program — appointments, group sessions, and admissions logistics can be supported. Eligibility and service radius depend on the track: outpatient ride support, residential intake pickups, and aftercare appointment transport are typically handled through separate pathways. Admissions can confirm what fits your situation when you call.
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.

