Verified Treatment Center
NYU Langone Hospital/Brooklyn
Brooklyn, NY · 11220
Key Takeaways for NYU Langone Hospital/Brooklyn
- • Inpatient · MAT offered
- • Accepts Medicaid, Medicare, Private insurance, TRICARE/VA
- • SAMHSA-listed facility
- • Direct line available · Helpline free & confidential 24/7
About NYU Langone Hospital/Brooklyn
Located in Brooklyn, NY, NYU Langone Hospital/Brooklyn operates in NY's broader addiction-treatment market. The facility offers specific levels of care: Inpatient, MAT. What this page tries to do is frame the specific questions worth asking, which are rarely the ones that get asked first.
Care levels at NYU Langone Hospital/Brooklyn
The facility's documented care levels are The facility offers specific levels of care: Inpatient, MAT. — each of which is appropriate for specific clinical presentations. Matching the level to the specific clinical need is the pre-admission work. The level-of-care question is where a lot of misaligned placements happen — a patient who needs residential ends up in IOP, or vice versa. The protection is a clinical assessment outside the facility's admissions team.
Insurance and payment
NYU Langone Hospital/Brooklyn 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: Seniors or older adults, Clients with co-occurring mental and substance use disorders, Persons experiencing first-episode psychosis. "Specialty track" is a marketing category often; it becomes a clinical category when specific clinicians deliver specific programming for a documented number of hours per week. Ask for those specifics.
Before you call
Three questions for NYU Langone Hospital/Brooklyn before you sign anything: what ASAM level you are being admitted at; what the written VOB says for your plan; how the program handles MAT. The facility's documented pharmacotherapy offerings suggest MAT is available — confirm the specific medications and prescriber access during the admissions conversation. These three together tell you most of what a facility's about.
Listing sourced from the SAMHSA Behavioral Health Treatment Services Locator. Data last synced April 2026. Verify current programs directly with the facility.
NYU Langone Hospital/Brooklyn at a Glance
Levels of care
Inpatient · MAT
Service settings
Hospital inpatient/24-hour hospital inpatient
Therapy approaches
Activity therapy, Cognitive behavioral therapy, Group therapy, Integrated Mental and Substance Use Disorder treatment, Individual psychotherapy, Telemedicine/telehealth therapy
Age groups
Young Adults, Seniors
Special populations
Seniors or older adults, Clients with co-occurring mental and substance use disorders, Persons experiencing first-episode psychosis, Persons with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), Persons 18 and older with serious mental illness (SMI)
Medications
Chlorpromazine, Fluphenazine, Haloperidol, Perphenazine, Olanzapine, Risperidone
Insurance & Payment Accepted
Confirm in-network status before admission — verification is free.
Medicaid
Coverage details →Medicare
Coverage details →Private insurance
Coverage details →TRICARE / VA
Coverage details →Contact & Location
Address
150 55th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11220
Facility direct line
718-630-7000Website
www.nyulangone.orgQuestions about this facility
Common questions about NYU Langone Hospital/Brooklyn
Answered from public sources: SAMHSA listings, federal parity regulations, and our own admissions helpline intake notes.
Is NYU Langone Hospital/Brooklyn listed in the SAMHSA Treatment Services Locator?
What insurance does NYU Langone Hospital/Brooklyn 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?
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