Silver Lining Intervention

SILVER LINING INTERVENTION

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS

Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP) is a structured form of addiction treatment that provides comprehensive care while allowing individuals to live at home or transitional housing and continue with their daily responsibilities, such as work, school, or family commitments.

IOP is typically recommended for individuals who do not require the intensive environment of inpatient rehab but still need a higher level of support than traditional outpatient therapy.

 

Benefits of Intensive Outpatient Programs (IOP):

 

  • Flexibility: IOPs allow individuals to continue with their daily lives while receiving intensive treatment.
  • Affordability: Generally, IOPs are more cost-effective than inpatient rehab due to lower housing and staffing costs.
  • Supportive Environment: Provides a supportive community of peers going through similar experiences, fostering a sense of belonging and encouragement.
  • Focus on Real-Life Application: Since participants live at home, they can immediately apply the skills and strategies they learn in therapy to their daily lives.

Family therapy is a key component of aftercare, helping families understand addiction and its effects on their dynamics. Therapists work with family members to improve communication, resolve conflicts, and develop healthy boundaries. Family therapy can also provide a space for family members to express their feelings and concerns, fostering a supportive and understanding environment.

Soberlink is a remote alcohol monitoring system designed to support individuals in their recovery journey by providing real-time data and accountability.

Soberlink devices are portable breathalyzers that use fuel cell technology to accurately measure Blood Alcohol Content (BAC).

The system employs advanced technology to help alcoholics maintain sobriety, build trust with their support network, and facilitate successful long-term recovery.

Soberlink is particularly useful in various settings, including personal recovery, family law cases, workplace compliance, and treatment programs.

Enabling is detrimental to the alcoholic drug addict because it unintentionally removes or lessens the consequences of their drinking and using.

This can include giving them money, paying their rent, bailing them out of jail, or any other number of consequences. While it may seem like you’re helping in the short term, enabling actually does more harm than good by allowing the person to avoid the tough realities they need to face.

For the person with addiction, enabling prevents them from experiencing the full impact of their choices, which can delay them from seeking help. Continued substance use without intervention can lead to serious consequences, including severe health issues, loss of relationships, and even death. They need to go through the challenges and discomfort to grow and recover, rather than avoiding them.

For the enabler, constantly trying to “fix” the situation can lead to emotional burnout, resentment, and regret.

Enabling hurts both sides by reinforcing destructive behaviors and preventing real change from happening.

Addiction is a life-threatening disease that requires tough love in many situations. It’s important to set boundaries and let the person with addiction face their reality.

Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP) is a type of addiction treatment that offers an intermediate level of care between inpatient rehab and intensive outpatient programs (IOP). PHP provides a structured and intensive therapeutic environment while allowing individuals to return home or transitional housing at the end of each treatment day. It is designed for those who need more support than an outpatient program can offer but do not require 24-hour supervision.

 

Benefits of Partial Hospitalization Programs (PHP):

 

  • Intensive Support: Provides a high level of care and supervision, making it suitable for individuals with more severe addiction issues or those at risk of relapse.
  • Flexibility: Allows individuals to live at home and maintain some daily responsibilities while receiving intensive treatment.
  • Comprehensive Care: Offers a multidisciplinary approach, addressing medical, psychological, and social aspects of addiction.
  • Smooth Transition: Acts as a bridge between inpatient treatment and outpatient care, ensuring a smooth transition and continuity of care.

Support groups for families, such as Al-Anon, Families Anonymous, Codependents Anonymous, Adult Children of Alcoholics, Parents of Addicted Loved Ones,  or Nar-Anon, offer a space for family members to share their experiences and receive support from others in similar situations. These groups can provide valuable insights, encouragement, and coping strategies, helping families navigate the challenges of supporting a loved one in recovery.

Sober coaching, also known as recovery coaching, is a personalized and supportive service designed to help individuals maintain sobriety and navigate the challenges of early recovery from addiction.

(See our coaching page)

A sober coach provides one-on-one guidance, encouragement, and practical strategies to support long-term recovery goals. This type of coaching is tailored to the specific needs of each individual, addressing various aspects of their life, including emotional, physical, social, and spiritual well-being.

Al-Anon is a support group for family members and friends of people struggling with alcoholism. It’s based on the same principles as Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) but is designed to help those affected by someone else’s drinking.

 

The focus of Al-Anon is on providing emotional support, sharing experiences, and learning how to cope with the challenges of living with or loving someone with an alcohol use disorder.

 

Al-Anon is not meant to get the person with the addiction sober, it can be highly effective in helping loved ones set healthy boundaries and take care of their own emotional well-being.

 

Through the support of others who are in similar situations, members learn how to stop enabling destructive behaviors, how to detach with love, and how to maintain their own mental health, which can indirectly influence the person with the addiction.

 

When the family member in al-anon works the program, it can create an environment where the person with the addiction is more likely to seek help.

If you’ve tried everything in your power to get them to stop and nothing has worked. The intervention is as much for you and your family as it is for the addict.  The intervention gives you the knowledge you’ve tried everything with no regrets if they do not accept help.

The interventionist decides who is appropriate after discussing the history and details of each family member, friend, or employer. The goal is to have a cohesive team.

We’ve prepared you for this in our pre-planning sessions. They have the right to refuse and we, those involved, will explain our boundaries and what our positions are moving forward. The enabling of the past stops today, regardless of whether they accept our treatment plan. We hope and expect them to say yes, but we are prepared to stand our ground for their own sake and survival.

Insurance companies do not cover the expense of an intervention. Most insurance companies pay at least a portion of inpatient and outpatient treatment.

The on-site or virtual intervention takes an hour or two in most cases. Ideally, pre-planning the intervention with all the included parties takes days or weeks, including a rehearsal depending on where each team member is and their availability.

Of course not. You can read a book or watch a video and  do your best. We don’t recommend doing an intevention without a trained interventionist to educate and train each participant what to expect and how to react. it is a stressful event for the IP (Identified Patient) as well as for you. A life is on the line and not worth taking the risk.

At least three people and not more than nine is what works best. They should be people significant to the alcoholic and who they respect. Family members, grandparents, employers, and friends. Drinking buddies are not included.

We haven’t seen much anger in our interventions, more often we see surprise and relief that what they thought was their secret is out of the box and they are relieved.

We control the narrative in the intervention, that is why we are there to facilitate communication and keep the focus on their illness and provide a path to recovery.

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