Family gathering for a supportive intervention conversation
Intervention

Family Intervention Services: When and How to Act

What professional intervention actually looks like, when it is warranted, and how families can prepare for the conversation

Bobby Tredinnick, LMSW, CASACFebruary 19, 202611 min readIntervention

"The goal of intervention is not to force someone into treatment. It is to create the conditions under which they can make a different choice."

Family intervention is one of the most misunderstood tools in behavioral health. Popular culture has created a distorted picture, the ambush, the confrontation, the ultimatum, that bears little resemblance to what effective professional intervention actually looks like. For families considering intervention, understanding what the process actually involves is essential to making a good decision about whether and how to proceed.

The fundamental goal of intervention is not to force someone into treatment. It is to create the conditions under which they can make a different choice, to interrupt the patterns that have made change feel impossible and to present a clear, supported path forward. When done well, intervention is an act of love, not coercion.

When Intervention Is Warranted

Intervention is most appropriate when several conditions are present: the individual's behavior is causing significant harm to themselves or others; previous attempts to address the situation through conversation have been unsuccessful; the family system has reached a point where continuing without change is untenable; and there is a realistic treatment option available if the individual agrees to accept help.

Intervention is not appropriate as a first response to concerning behavior, as a way to punish or control someone, or when there is no clear treatment plan in place. The SAMHSA National Helpline (1-800-662-4357) can help families assess whether their situation warrants professional intervention and identify appropriate resources.

The goal of intervention is not to force someone into treatment. It is to create the conditions under which they can make a different choice.

The Major Intervention Approaches

Several evidence-based intervention approaches have been developed over the past several decades, each with different philosophies and methods. Understanding these approaches helps families make informed decisions about which model is most appropriate for their situation.

The Johnson Intervention is the classic confrontational model, a planned meeting where family members and loved ones present the individual with specific examples of how their behavior has caused harm, express their love and concern, and present a treatment option with clear consequences if the individual refuses. This approach can be effective but requires careful preparation and a skilled interventionist to manage the emotional dynamics.

The ARISE Intervention takes a more collaborative approach, involving the individual in the planning process from the beginning. Rather than a surprise confrontation, ARISE creates an ongoing "intervention network" that supports the individual in moving toward treatment over time. This approach is less confrontational and may be more appropriate for individuals who are likely to respond negatively to the classic model.

CRAFT (Community Reinforcement and Family Training) is a skills-based approach that teaches family members how to change their own behavior in ways that reduce enabling, increase the individual's motivation for change, and improve the family's own wellbeing regardless of whether the individual enters treatment. Research supports CRAFT as one of the most effective approaches for engaging resistant individuals in treatment.

Choosing the Right Interventionist

The quality of the interventionist is the most important variable in intervention outcomes. A skilled interventionist brings clinical training, experience with the specific population and presenting issues, the ability to manage intense emotional dynamics, and the judgment to adapt the approach when circumstances change.

When evaluating interventionists, ask about their clinical training and licensure, their experience with similar situations, their approach to intervention (and why they prefer it), their plan for what happens if the individual refuses treatment, and their involvement after the intervention. An interventionist who disappears after the meeting is not providing comprehensive support.

What Families Need to Prepare

Effective intervention requires significant preparation on the part of the family. This includes identifying the specific treatment option that will be presented, ensuring that the treatment placement is available and appropriate, preparing the family members who will participate, and working through the emotional dynamics that are likely to arise.

Family members often need support in distinguishing between loving concern and enabling behavior, in articulating the impact of the individual's behavior without blame or accusation, and in maintaining their positions under pressure. A skilled interventionist will guide this preparation process.

Coast Health Consulting provides intervention services as part of our comprehensive case management approach. We work with families across the United States, view our national coverage map or contact our team for a confidential consultation.

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Bobby Tredinnick, LMSW, CASAC

Bobby Tredinnick is a Licensed Master Social Worker and Certified Alcohol and Substance Abuse Counselor with extensive experience in behavioral health case management, intervention services, and clinical support for young adults and families navigating complex mental health and addiction challenges.