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411 West 114th Street (between Amsterdam Avenue and Morningside Drive) New York, NY 10025 Main Phone: (212) 523-4885 Intake Coordinator: (212) 523-3082 Fax: (212) 523-3064 Services are available for Spanish-speaking families. If emergencies occur during non-business hours, we encourage families to contact the St. Lukes and Roosevelt Hospitals Comprehensive Psychiatric Emergency Program at (212) 523-3347. Families may also call 911 or visit their closest emergency room.
www.ChildFamilyInstituteNY.org www.slrpsych.org
The Parent-Infant Center (PIC) is a prevention and treatment program that provides multidisciplinary assessment and psychotherapeutic services to pregnant women and caregivers and their children from the ages of birth to three years old. The focus of treatment is on the child-caregiver relationship. The primary goal is to foster healthy attachments and strengthen relationships between caregivers and their children. Caregivers include pregnant women, mothers, fathers, teenage parents, grandparents, foster parents, adoptive parents and any other primary caregiver of very young children.
OUR SERVICES
PIC offers multiple services to best support the unique needs of each family including: Dyadic (infant/toddler-caregiver) Therapy Parent-Child Psychotherapy Groups Individual Therapy for Parents Family Therapy Developmental Screenings Psychopharmacological (medication) Treatment Referrals to Early Intervention and the Committee on Preschool Special Education Coordination with Schools and Community Agencies
WHO WE SERVE
PIC serves families within the five boroughs including: Caregivers with a range of psychological and psychiatric needs including mood disorders, pre and postpartum depression, anxiety, ongoing or past trauma (physical and sexual abuse, severe neglect, domestic violence, and community violence), substance abuse, and physical health problems. Families with limited social support including adolescents and single parents. Infants and toddlers who exhibit emotional and behavioral difficulties, developmental delays and/or have been exposed to trauma. Any family that is overwhelmed with the responsibilities and challenges of parenting infants and toddlers.