Bobby E. Wright Comprehensive Behavioral Health Center

Mental Health · Illinois · Paid

Community behavioral health center on Chicago's West Side providing mental health counseling, substance abuse treatment, and crisis intervention. Bobby E. Wright serves Garfield Park and surrounding West Side neighborhoods with a full range of outpatient and intensive services. A sliding fee scale makes care accessible for uninsured or low-income fathers. Call to schedule an intake evaluation and learn about available therapy and psychiatric services.

Contact & Details

Address: 9 S Kedzie Ave, Chicago, IL 60612

Phone: 773-722-7900

Hours: Mon-Fri 8am-5pm

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About Mental Health for Fathers

Mental health services in the US range from free crisis lines and public community mental health centers to private therapy and inpatient care. The 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline operates 24/7 nationwide and is free and confidential. SAMHSA's National Helpline (1-800-662-HELP) connects callers with local treatment resources for mental health and substance use. Community Mental Health Centers exist in every state and serve people regardless of ability to pay, usually on sliding-scale fees. Medicaid covers mental health care in all states, and the ACA requires insurance plans to cover mental health at parity with medical care. Fathers are particularly at risk for undiagnosed depression, anxiety, and substance issues around separation and custody disputes — this directory surfaces crisis lines, low-cost therapy, support groups specifically for men, and state mental health authorities.

Mental Health in Illinois

Illinois handles family law through circuit courts in each of its 23 judicial circuits, with Cook County running its own Domestic Relations Division. The Division of Child Support Services handles enforcement. Chicago dominates the state; downstate metros include Aurora, Rockford, Joliet, Naperville, and Peoria. Legal Aid Chicago (formerly CVLS) and Land of Lincoln Legal Aid cover most of the state for low-income fathers.

More Mental Health in Illinois

  • 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline — Call or text 988 any time for free, confidential support during mental health or suicidal crises. Available 24/7 in Illinois. Trained crisis
  • Illinois Call4Calm Line — State-run emotional support line operated by the Illinois Department of Human Services. Text TALK to 552020 or call for free emotional suppo
  • NAMI Chicago — Chicago chapter of NAMI offering support groups, education programs, and an information/referral helpline for individuals and families affec
  • NAMI Illinois — Statewide NAMI office providing advocacy, education, and support programs for those affected by mental illness. Connects callers to local af
  • Crisis Text Line — Text HOME to 741741 for free, confidential crisis counseling via text message available 24/7. Ideal for men who prefer texting over calling,
  • SAMHSA National Helpline — Free, confidential 24/7 helpline for mental health and substance use referrals in English and Spanish. No insurance required to call. SAMHSA

Mental Health — Common Questions

I'm in crisis right now — who do I call?
Dial or text 988 — the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, free and confidential, 24/7 nationwide. Veterans press 1. For non-crisis mental health support, call SAMHSA's National Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP.
How do I find a therapist I can afford?
Community Mental Health Centers (every state has them) charge on sliding-scale based on income. Medicaid covers therapy in all states. Private insurance must cover mental health at parity with medical care. Psychology Today's therapist finder lets you filter by insurance. Open Path Collective offers
0–$80 sessions.
Can therapy hurt my custody case?
Almost always no — judges view voluntarily-sought mental health treatment as responsible parenting. Therapists must keep sessions confidential (with narrow exceptions: child abuse disclosure, imminent self-harm). Court-ordered evaluations are different from voluntary therapy.
Is there support specifically for men?
Yes. Face It Foundation, HeadsUpGuys, Men's Sheds, and Man Therapy run men-focused programs. Many community mental health centers run men-only groups. Fatherhood programs often include peer support as part of their model.