Verified Treatment Center
Johns Hopkins Hospital Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Baltimore, MD · 21287
Key Takeaways for Johns Hopkins Hospital Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
- • Inpatient · MAT · Dual Dx offered
- • Accepts Medicaid, Private insurance, TRICARE/VA
- • Joint Commission accredited · SAMHSA-listed facility
- • Direct line available · Helpline free & confidential 24/7
About Johns Hopkins Hospital Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Johns Hopkins Hospital Child and Adolescent Psychiatry sits in Baltimore, MD, one of the many SAMHSA-registered addiction-treatment facilities across MD. The facility offers a continuum of care across multiple levels — Inpatient, MAT, Dual Dx — which means it can, in principle, hold a patient across the arc of a typical treatment episode. The interesting questions about any specific program are rarely the ones its website answers.
Care levels at Johns Hopkins Hospital Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
The facility offers a continuum of care across multiple levels — Inpatient, MAT, Dual Dx — which means it can, in principle, hold a patient across the arc of a typical treatment episode. The practical question is whether it is genuinely strong at each level, or whether one level is the core business and the others are secondary. The gap between "this facility offers residential" and "residential is the right level for this patient" is wider than most facility websites suggest. Bridge it with an outside assessment before committing.
Insurance and payment
Johns Hopkins Hospital Child and Adolescent Psychiatry accepts both Medicaid and commercial insurance, which is the broadest payer profile and typically correlates with programs that operate at scale across the economic spectrum. The facility also accepts TRICARE or military benefits. The uncomfortable truth about insurance at most treatment centers is that admissions staff and the utilization-review team sometimes have different understandings of what was promised. Written VOB forces those understandings into alignment.
Specialty programming
The facility's documented specialty programming includes: Children/adolescents with serious emotional disturbance (SED). A facility's specialty designation is a starting filter, not an endorsement. The operational questions (who leads it, how many hours per week, what credentials) are where the actual answer lives.
Before you call
Questions that matter before admitting to Johns Hopkins Hospital Child and Adolescent Psychiatry: ASAM level of care (not the facility's category, the clinical level); written VOB; MAT policy. The facility's documented pharmacotherapy offerings suggest MAT is available — confirm the specific medications and prescriber access during the admissions conversation. The ones who answer those quickly are usually the ones worth considering. The ones who dodge are almost always worth skipping.
Listing sourced from the SAMHSA Behavioral Health Treatment Services Locator. Data last synced April 2026. Verify current programs directly with the facility.
Johns Hopkins Hospital Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at a Glance
Levels of care
Inpatient · MAT · Dual Dx
Service settings
Hospital inpatient/24-hour hospital inpatient
Therapy approaches
Activity therapy, Cognitive behavioral therapy, Dialectical behavior therapy, Electroconvulsive therapy, Group therapy, Abnormal involuntary movement scale
Age groups
Children/Adolescents
Special populations
Children/adolescents with serious emotional disturbance (SED)
Medications
Chlorpromazine, Fluphenazine, Haloperidol, Perphenazine, Aripiprazole, Brexpiprazole
Insurance & Payment Accepted
Confirm in-network status before admission — verification is free.
Medicaid
Coverage details →Medicare
Private insurance
Coverage details →TRICARE / VA
Coverage details →Contact & Location
Address
1800 Orleans Street, Baltimore, MD 21287
Facility direct line
(410) 955-5000Website
www.hopkinsmedicine.orgQuestions about this facility
Common questions about Johns Hopkins Hospital Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Answered from public sources: SAMHSA listings, federal parity regulations, and our own admissions helpline intake notes.
Is Johns Hopkins Hospital Child and Adolescent Psychiatry listed in the SAMHSA Treatment Services Locator?
What insurance does Johns Hopkins Hospital Child and Adolescent Psychiatry accept?
How do I know if this level of care is right for me?
Is calling confidential? Will my employer find out?
What happens if I call the helpline instead of the facility?
Similar facilities nearby