An intervention is a positive confrontation facilitated by a certified intervention professional educating and guiding family and friends on how to communicate with their loved ones struggling with addictions and/or mental health challenges, with the goal of the individual accepting professional treatment.
The Interventionist will guide the entire intervention process, advocating for the family, friends, and the individual struggling with addictions and/or mental health challenges. The goal of an intervention is to address the destructiveness of addiction and its effects on your relationships with the individual by lovingly exposing the truth.
It is important for family/friends to understand the cycle of addiction, enabling, co-dependency behaviours, and becoming aware of the roles you play in the individual addictions and/or mental health challenges. Family/friends need to learn to set healthy boundaries for the individual struggling with addiction and/or mental health challenges, it is vitally important to stop enabling or engaging in their crisis, feeling sorry and/or responsible for their choices.
What is Case Management? Providing professional accountability for individuals for treatment aftercare services. This will help minimize emotional pressures for individual clients in their recovery process.
Case Management provides real-time advice and guidance to problems or to find solutions by having a professional available to guide and direct recovery solutions and healing. Individuals struggling with addiction and/or mental health challenges must commit to working with a professional.
Discussions will include various topics such as crisis interventions, addiction, mental health, emotional wellness, enabling, codependency, unhealthy attachment issues, health attachment, recovery, family cycle patterns and behaviours, support networks etc. It is important to ask questions, be open to guidance and support from the case manager to gain education on recovery and develop skills to strengthen your relationships.
Case Management involvement will often last for between (one) to (eighteen months). It all depends on the individual who struggles with addiction and/or mental health challenges.
The Interventionist will guide the entire intervention process, advocating for the family, friends, and the individual struggling with addictions and/or mental health challenges. The goal of an intervention is to address the destructiveness of addiction and its effects on your relationships with the individual by lovingly exposing the truth.
A sober companion or recovery coach works full-time with the client: full work days, nights, weekends or extended periods where the coach is by the client’s side 24 hours a day. This long-term option can begin with treatment discharge and may develop into a coaching relationship that continues for several weeks, months or longer.
When returning home from treatment, the client trades a secure, drug-free environment for a situation where they know there are problems. The sober companion may provide the symbolic and functional safety of the treatment centre.
This coach will introduce the client to 12-step meetings, guide them past former triggers for their addiction, and support them in developing a recovery plan. The sober companion helps the client make lifestyle changes to experience a better quality of life in the first crucial days after discharge from a treatment centre.
Sober transport or therapeutic transport is the service of having a professional sober or therapeutic companion accompany someone to a location for treatment. This may be someone suffering from a substance use disorder or someone working through a mental health or other behavioural health issue.
Ensuring that someone needing treatment will be able to get to that location safely (and without hurting themselves or using substances on the way there) is one of the most important treatment considerations, especially if someone is unable or unwilling to go with their family.
Sober transport services can serve symbolically as a clean break for the person battling a substance abuse disorder or mental health issue, where they are both assured of their safety and given someone to talk to and confide with en route.
The Sober Transporter is trained to diffuse the anxiety that accompanies new sobriety. They are usually sober and drug-free themselves so that they can present a role model and have healthy conversations. A good Sober Transporter can turn a difficult, angry trip into a learning experience, even an enjoyable one.