Professional Drug & Alcohol Interventions

Get Your Loved One, Professional Peer, or Person in Need the Help They Deserve — Without Waiting for “Rock Bottom”

Confidential, family and peer-centered interventions led by a certified Love First–trained interventionist.
Serving the East Coast.

Who We Help

When success masks addiction, families and peer networks suffer in silence.
Get Your Loved One, Professional Peer, or Person in Need the Help They Deserve — Without Waiting for “Rock Bottom”

We support families and communities of:
• Executives and business owners
• Licensed professionals (physicians, attorneys, CPAs, pilots, and other licensed professionals)
• High-net-worth individuals
• Individuals who appear high-functioning but are impaired
• Families who have tried therapy or treatment before without lasting results


Whether your loved one is spiraling or high-functioning but impaired, you don’t have to wait for a crisis to act.

  • When someone you love is struggling, it can feel overwhelming and uncertain. Our team is here to guide you with clarity, compassion, and a plan you can trust—every step of the way.
A Compassionate, Proven Model

Our Intervention Approach

We follow the Love First model—the nation’s leading structured-intervention method.
This structured, loving approach prioritizes:

  • Respect for your loved one’s or peer’s dignity
  • Clear, unified communication
  • Safety and calm during a time of uncertainty
  • Immediate entry into the appropriate level of care

We walk with you through every step:
The process includes:
1. Structured preparation and coaching
2. Written letters and readiness work
3. Live intervention facilitation
4. Immediate treatment coordination
5. Safe escort to treatment
6. Ongoing family support

This is not a confrontation. It’s a turning point.

Why Families and Executives Choose Counseling Choices

-Certified through Love First – the gold standard in intervention
-Discreet, professional support for high-performing families
-Personal experience guiding executives and professionals through change
-Trauma-informed, relationship-preserving approach

Meet Our Team

Leadership & Clinical Oversight

Roy Page

Certified Drug & Alcohol Interventionist, Love First–Trained
Primary intervention facilitator

Brandon Robinson

Clinical Director, Counseling Choices
Intervention facilitator, clinical leadership and oversight

Start Here

Let’s Talk.

Schedule a confidential 15-minute consultation to discuss your family’s or professional peer’s situation. We’ll help you assess whether a formal intervention is the right next step.

Select one of the providers below to schedule a confidential call:

Overline

What Is a Love First Intervention?

A Love First Intervention is a structured, person-centered process designed to help individuals struggling with addiction or alcoholism accept treatment—without confrontation or shame.
Developed by Jeff and Debra Jay, the Love First model emphasizes compassion, clarity, and unity. Unlike outdated “tough love” approaches, Love First interventions involve careful preparation, emotional safety, and a strong focus on preserving relationships.
The process begins with a trained interventionist guiding family members, and close peers through planning and letter writing. Each participant writes a heartfelt letter expressing concern, love, and specific examples of how the addiction is affecting the family. These letters are read aloud during the intervention, creating a calm, non-judgmental environment that often breaks through the loved one’s denial.
A key element of the Love First model is the pre-arranged treatment plan. The intervention doesn’t just identify the problem—it presents a clear solution. The goal is immediate entry into care, often accompanied by a professional escort to the treatment center.
This model is especially effective for high-functioning individuals, such as executives, doctors, or entrepreneurs, who may be skilled at hiding their struggles.
At Counseling Choices, we specialize in Love First interventions for professionals and high-achieving families. If someone you love is struggling, but won’t accept help, a Love First Intervention may be the most loving action you can take.

NEXT STEPS

What Happens After an Intervention?

You’ve just completed a professional intervention. The client agreed to get help. Now what?
The time immediately after an intervention is just as important as the planning and execution. At Counseling Choices, we ensure families are fully supported during this critical transition phase.

1. Safe Escort to Treatment

If your loved one accepts help, the next step is immediate entry into a pre-arranged treatment program. As a trained interventionist, we arrange personal escort to treatment, ensuring a safe, calm, and seamless handoff—especially critical for professionals who may feel anxious or uncertain.

2. Support Continues

The intervention isn’t the end—it’s the beginning of a healing journey. Families often experience relief, but also confusion, fear, or guilt. We provide ongoing support, coaching, and referrals to help families navigate this emotional window and maintain healthy boundaries.

3. Collaboration with Treatment Providers

We coordinate directly with the treatment team to share context, history, and family dynamics (with consent). This ensures our client’s care team has the full picture.

4. Post-Treatment Planning

Once treatment begins, we help families begin thinking about aftercare, reintegration, and continuing support.
A successful intervention creates momentum—but follow-through is where lives change. If you’re considering a Love First Intervention, know that we’re with you through every step.

5 SIGNS IT’S TIME FOR AN INTERVENTION

Even if they’re “successful” on the outside

By Roy Page, Certified Love First–Trained Interventionist

Even high-performing people can be silently suffering. Denial is powerful—and families often wait too long. Here are 5 clear signs it’s time to act.
1. Their Life is Shrinking
They’re withdrawing from family, friends, and meaningful responsibilities—but still maintaining a professional front. Success becomes a mask for decline.
 
2. You’re Walking on Eggshells
The family dynamic revolves around avoiding conflict. You avoid telling the truth for fear they’ll shut down, explode, or disappear.
 
3. You’ve Tried Everything Else
You’ve offered help. Set boundaries. Paid for treatment. Nothing has worked—or they made promises and quickly relapsed.
 
4. You’re Seeing a Pattern of Crises
Missed work, strange accidents, DUIs, overdoses, volatile relationships. These aren’t isolated incidents—they’re symptoms of a deeper problem.
 
5. The Family is Drained and Scared
You’re emotionally and physically exhausted. If one more incident happens, you’re not sure how you’ll handle it. You’re ready for real change.
“You don’t have to wait for rock bottom.”
Professional, family-centered interventions work—especially when done with care and structure.