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Russian-Speaking13 facilitiesBrooklyn, NY

Russian-Speaking Rehabs in Brooklyn, NY

Browse 13 verified russian-speaking treatment facilities serving Brooklyn, New York. Each facility is matched against SAMHSA's national database for russian-speaking rehabs criteria.

Russian-Speaking Rehabs in Brooklyn

Showing 13 of 13 verified facilities

Treatment levels at Brooklyn russian-speaking centers

Distribution by level across 13 russian-speaking programs in Brooklyn (a facility may offer multiple levels):

Outpatient69%

9 of 13 facilities

Outpatient69%

9 of 13 facilities

Outpatient62%

8 of 13 facilities

Outpatient31%

4 of 13 facilities

Residential31%

4 of 13 facilities

IOP23%

3 of 13 facilities

Common care types:

Substance Use Treatment (13)Detox (8)Dual Diagnosis (6)

Insurance and payment at Brooklyn russian-speaking programs

Medicaid
13
of 13 (100%)
Medicare
9
of 13 (69%)
Private Insurance
12
of 13 (92%)

Most accepted plans:

Cash or self-payment (100%)Medicaid (100%)Private health insurance (92%)Medicare (69%)State-financed health insurance plan other than Medicaid (69%)Federal military insurance (e.g., TRICARE) (31%)

Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT): 13 of 13 (100%) facilities in Brooklyn offer MAT with Buprenorphine used in Treatment, Naltrexone used in Treatment, Methadone used in Treatment commonly available.

How russian-speaking care is delivered in Brooklyn

In Brooklyn, 13 facilities meet the russian-speaking threshold tracked in our SAMHSA index. The local mix leans outpatient and outpatient methadone/buprenorphine or naltrexone treatment — a useful signal when you're weighing inpatient structure versus daytime programming.

Most Brooklyn programs sit within a 20-minute commute of each other, which matters for outpatient continuity. Substance use treatment alongside detoxification tend to be the most common care tracks reported by these facilities.

What russian-speaking programs in Brooklyn typically include

Across the 13 local facilities, the dominant service settings are outpatient (69%), outpatient methadone/buprenorphine or naltrexone treatment (69%), regular outpatient treatment (62%). Most programs offer more than one level, so a step-down from residential into intensive outpatient can usually stay within the same facility.

Beyond service intensity, Brooklyn programs treat substance use treatment, detoxification, treatment for co-occurring substance use plus either serious mental health illness in adults/serious emotional disturbance in children. Co-occurring mental health support is increasingly bundled with substance care here, particularly in mid-sized clinical groups.

Insurance and cost at Brooklyn russian-speaking programs

Insurance acceptance among Brooklyn's 13 russian-speaking facilities: Medicaid is honored at 13 programs, private insurance at 12, and Medicare at 9. For self-pay, most programs publish sliding-scale rates on request even when not advertised on their site.

The plans most commonly listed at Brooklyn programs are Medicaid, Private health insurance, Medicare, and State-financed health insurance plan other than Medicaid. Always call to verify deductible status and authorization requirements — even the same plan can have facility-specific quirks.

Russian-Speaking in nearby New York cities

Other specialized programs in Brooklyn

Frequently Asked Questions

Start with the 13 verified facilities listed on this page — each is matched against SAMHSA's national database for the Russian-Speaking category. Filter by treatment level (outpatient and outpatient methadone/buprenorphine or naltrexone treatment are most common in Brooklyn), then call two or three programs to compare admissions timelines and clinical philosophy. SAMHSA's 24/7 helpline at 1-800-662-4357 also offers free referrals if you want a second opinion.

Out-of-pocket costs vary widely by program length and level: outpatient programs in Brooklyn typically run $1,500-$10,000 for a 30-90 day track; residential can be $10,000-$30,000+ for the same duration. With insurance, you'd likely pay deductible plus coinsurance. 13 of Brooklyn's 13 programs (100%) accept Medicaid, which significantly reduces or eliminates out-of-pocket costs for eligible patients.

The most commonly accepted plans across Brooklyn's 13 russian-speaking facilities are Medicaid, Private health insurance, Medicare, and State-financed health insurance plan other than Medicaid. 13 programs accept Medicaid (100%) and 9 accept Medicare. Even if your plan isn't explicitly listed, ask — most facilities work with several insurers under in-network or single-case agreements.

Yes — Russian-Speaking care is available across multiple New York cities, most notably New York. Commute distance to nearby cities can be an acceptable trade-off if your top in-Brooklyn pick has a long wait or doesn't take your insurance.

It varies by level of care. For outpatient services, expect a 3-7 day intake window in Brooklyn. IOP slots typically open within 1-2 weeks. Residential beds can range from immediate to 2-3 weeks depending on the program. Russian-Speaking specialty programs sometimes have longer waits — call early and have your insurance information ready to speed verification.

Yes — 13 of Brooklyn's 13 russian-speaking programs (100%) offer MAT. Medications commonly available include Buprenorphine used in Treatment, Naltrexone used in Treatment, Methadone used in Treatment. MAT can be combined with counseling and behavioral therapy under the same program — the current evidence supports this combination over either alone for opioid and alcohol use disorders.