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Intervention
principles
There are ten general principles that influence the decision
to intervene and that guide the intervention process.
These are:
• Your behavior is causing significant damage in
your life.
• Denial is preventing you from fully appreciating
the damage the addiction is doing to you and your life.
• You're unlikely to seek help on your own.
• The people involved with you can change the environment
by changing the enabling system — making it more
likely that you will seek help.
• The sense of genuine concern and understanding
conveyed by the interventionist is one of the most important
factors in influencing you to seek help.
• Anger and punitive measures have no place in interventions,
because they increase your defenses, making it less likely
you'll seek help.
• The consequences for not going into treatment
should not be designed to punish but rather to protect
your health and well being.
• You require an initial period of intensive treatment
such as a 28-day residential program or an intensive outpatient
program to address your denial.
• The intervention may be useful even if you aren't
likely to go to treatment.
• The intervention isn't a confrontation. Rather,
it is a well-organized expression of genuine concern for
you, given a chronic and serious addiction problem.
Click HERE
to view or download a Word Document which describes the
TEG
INTERVENTIONS process.
Click HERE
to view or download a Word Document which defines the
elements of Intervention.
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