Recovery Network is a multidisciplinary firm focused on the health of individuals and families in their journey to getting and being successful in recovery.
Crafting creative strategies and building positive experiences across the world.
We assist clients to treatment following an intervention or decision to enter treatment, between treatment programs and care providers, and/or back home from treatment.
Recovery Network offers three basic types of Sober Transport services:
A heart-to-heart conversation with someone suffering from a substance abuse disorder often requires a more focused and unified approach to result in them agreeing to get the help they need. Interventions can be rather confrontational, in that family members gather together as a show of support and strength as they tell their addicted loved one they will no longer enable the addiction.
There are many professional models of Intervention, both direct and indirect, such as:
While the experts at Recovery Network are well-versed on the various theories, philosophies, and modalities of each type of intervention, our primary focus is to design a custom intervention.
No matter how committed an individual is to getting sober and staying sober, the battle to quiet that incessant mental addict chatter is difficult to overcome—especially in the first year of recovery.
So, you or your loved one is ready to do what it takes to get clean, to stay clean and enjoy a satisfying life. Let’s face it, knowing that relapse is a potential threat to that plan, you could likely benefit from some help in the early days of your sobriety. A solid post-treatment plan should include enlisting all the help you might need in order to succeed.
A Case Manager’s primary objective is to serve as the client’s champion, coordinating services and other care providers in a way that best serves the client. Some of the services our Case Manager’s coordinate include:
We recomend Oxford Houses and what do they exist for? Recovery …
Oxford Houses offer a supportive way of living, and opportunities to learn skills in an alcohol and drugfree environment. About 2,500 people in Washington State alone receive recovery support through Oxford Houses each year. They are available in every state, self-run, single-family homes. There are separate houses for men and women, and some houses accept children with their parents.
Having a different place to live, with people who are committed to being alcohol and drug free is a key factor in maintaining sobriety.
The 12 Steps outline a path to spiritual progress through a series of actions designed to elicit what The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous refers to as a “psychic change” – a complete mental, emotional, and spiritual shift in perception.
We believe the 12 Steps can be a critical element of a long-term recovery program. Accordingly, this is the main positive thread that permeates all of Recovery Network’s services.
Regarding participation and perceived benefit from a 12-step mutual-help organizations, like Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and Narcotics Anonymous (NA), research has shown that finding a sense of belonging and feeling a sense of universality — having a shared experience or problem — are important subjective experiences of youth recovery.
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