Interventions for Families and Their Loved Ones Affected by Mental Disorders, Alcohol, and Drug Addiction

We understand the impact of addiction and mental health on the family.

Our addiction and mental health intervention services are designed to help families and their loved ones heal, not to be shamed or have guilt inflicted upon them for the way they have handled the situation.

You Don’t Need Permission to Ask for Help.

Being emotionally attached and overwhelmed can compromise the ability to find successful solutions. An unbiased professional is able to see things much differently. Here are some effective approaches.

Our mental health intervention, drug addiction intervention, alcoholic intervention, and family recovery coaching programs are designed to address two problems:

The substance user’s problem with drugs, alcohol, mental health, or dual diagnosis

The family system that is operating in a counterproductive way, distancing family members as well as their loved one from an effective solution.

Many interventionists try to play therapist and clinician while adding on family recovery and coaching services. None of these interventionists is qualified or licensed to do that. Interventionists must stay in their lane after the person accepts help. The best outcomes come from your loved one’s treatment team and the treatment center’s family program. If you choose an interventionist who offers support services after a successful intervention, it will create friction and discrepancies in your loved one’s treatment; we have gone down that road, and it does not work.

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While Addressing Their Mental Health or Addiction to Drugs or Alcohol, We Help Your Family Recover Too

Family First Intervention understands that the loved one with substance use or mental health disorder is not the only one struggling; the family goes through as much if not more heartache themselves.

Through our Self Awareness Family Education Recovery Program, we continually strive to provide as much help and closure to the family as we can. Somehow, many have been led to believe an intervention is an event in which a recovering person tells the family what not to do anymore and then talks your loved one into going to a treatment center. A professional intervention based on an understanding of mental health and addiction and its effect on family systems produces far better outcomes than an isolated event that includes a powerful speech.