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What to Do When a Loved One Refuses Help for Mental Illness or Addiction
Reflection Family Interventions and The Family Recovery Foundation Launch Groundbreaking 24-Week Family Recovery Curriculum
PHOENIX, AZ / ACCESS Newswire / July 29, 2025 / What should you do when a loved one refuses help for addiction or mental illness? For families caught in the chaos of crisis, the traditional answer-"wait until they hit bottom"-has caused more harm than healing.
Reflection Family Interventions, a national leader in family intervention services, is proud to announce a groundbreaking partnership with The Family Recovery Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to restoring families affected by behavioral health disorders. At the heart of this collaboration is a first-of-its-kind, 24-week intervention-specific family recovery curriculum, designed by Reflection exclusively for families navigating a loved one's refusal of care.
"The most important question families can ask isn't just 'why won't they get help?'-it's 'what is making a life of dysfunction feel safer than a life of recovery?'" said Andrew Engbring, Founder of Reflection Family Interventions and longtime board member of The Family Recovery Foundation. "We help families answer that question, heal their role in the cycle, and guide their loved one into recovery-even when they're saying no."
A New Standard of Care for Families in Crisis
For decades, families have been left behind in the behavioral health system. Interventionists often offer only 2-3 days of support. Treatment centers give families basic psychoeducation and suggest attending Al-Anon. That approach fails to address the complex dynamics, trauma, and codependency that keep families stuck.
Reflection Family Interventions is redefining what true family-centered recovery looks like.
One Arizona family came to Reflection after their adult daughter had refused treatment for her fentanyl addiction multiple times. The family was heartbroken, divided, and unsure if she would survive. "They had tried everything-pleading, negotiating, even accepting partial efforts just to keep the peace," said Engbring. "They were emotionally drained and walking on eggshells."
Through Reflection's 24-week family recovery program, the family finally stopped rescuing and started healing. They completed the curriculum together, learned to set unified boundaries, and several family members even began their own recovery journeys.
Within hours of the intervention, their daughter entered treatment-and for the first time, the entire family began to heal. Today, they are sober, united, and thriving-filled with laughter, love, and genuine peace. Most remarkably, the daughter herself left Reflection a heartfelt 5-star review, thanking the very team that intervened.
"It's rare for the person in crisis to praise the intervention process," said Andrew Engbring, "but when the whole family commits to change, the outcome speaks for itself."
The Old Model vs. The Reflection Model:
Traditional Model | Reflection's New Standard |
---|---|
2-3 day intervention | 6-12 months of guided recovery |
"Wait for bottom" | Engage the whole system now |
Generic advice | Customized family curriculum |
Focus on the individual | Treat the family as the client |
Surface-level support | Trauma-informed, long-term coaching |
The 24-Week Curriculum: A Pathway to Real Change
The newly launched curriculum-available in partnership with The Family Recovery Foundation-equips families with education, structure, and emotional tools to:
Understand why a loved one resists treatment
Stop enabling, rescuing, and walking on eggshells
Set boundaries rooted in love, not fear
Begin their own healing journey
Rebuild and reintegrate their loved one into a healthier family system
"Families are not just affected by addiction and mental illness-they are deeply entangled in it," said Shahar Engbring, Co-Founder and Director of Admissions at Reflection. "Our process transforms that entanglement into empowerment. When the family gets well, the entire system begins to change."
This model also includes professional interventionists, in-home psychiatric stabilization, post-treatment reintegration planning, and access to free or low-cost virtual support groups, coaching, and education through the Foundation.
"This partnership brings depth and structure to our mission," said Paul Alexander, Founder of The Family Recovery Foundation. "Reflection's curriculum fills a longstanding gap in the recovery field-families now have a step-by-step pathway to healing, instead of being left in the dark."
This Comprehensive Model Includes:
Nationwide addiction and mental health intervention services
24-week intervention-specific family curriculum
Six-month family coaching and reintegration support
Faith-informed, trauma-sensitive support groups and resources
In-home psychiatric stabilization and care coordination
Setting a New Industry Standard
Reflection Family Interventions and The Family Recovery Foundation believe this collaboration represents a long-overdue shift in how the recovery field supports families. By focusing on education, structure, and long-term healing, they hope to inspire change throughout the intervention and treatment landscape.
"Families are not an afterthought," said Shahar Engbring. "They are the key to sustainable recovery. We hope this model sets a new standard of care throughout the industry."
Call to Action
Families in crisis, treatment professionals, and community organizations can learn more or request confidential support by visiting:
www.reflectionfamilyinterventions.com
[email protected]
888-414-2894
To access free family resources and enroll in nonprofit-based services, visit:
https://tfrfoundation.org/
About Reflection Family Interventions
Reflection Family Interventions is a family-owned, trauma-informed intervention and coaching company offering nationwide support to families affected by addiction and mental health disorders. Their comprehensive model includes crisis intervention, long-term coaching, in-home stabilization, and post-treatment reintegration.
About The Family Recovery Foundation
The Family Recovery Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit providing education, coaching, and community-based support to families impacted by addiction and mental illness. Its mission is to restore families through compassion, faith, and practical guidance.
SOURCE: Reflection Family Interventions
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
P.Mathewson--AMWN