FAQs
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No. We’re not a medical treatment program or a therapy practice. Our services are complementary support. Meaning our services are designed to work alongside treatment providers, therapists, or recovery programs. We focus on structure, accountability, and real-world follow-through.
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Not always. Many families reach out when a loved one is still using or refusing help — that’s where our family-centered, invitation-based interventions are most effective. If someone is already in early recovery, we can support them in building stability, structure, and independence.
We also recognize that recovery doesn’t look the same for everyone. While the research shows that abstinence often leads to the best long-term outcomes, we don’t define recovery for our clients. Our role is to support individuals and families in finding the path that works for them, always in alignment with their treatment team or trusted professionals.
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It happens. That’s why our interventions don’t stop at a single meeting. We continue supporting the family for months afterward, helping everyone involved find healthier ways forward — regardless of whether your loved one says “yes” right away. Change often takes time, and sometimes it’s the consistency of several family meetings that opens the door.
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Therapists focus on clinical treatment. Coaches often focus on motivation or skills. We bridge the gap. Our work combines invitational interventions, recovery-informed coaching, and real-world accountability. We’re not here to replace therapy — we’re here to make sure progress carries into daily life.
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In most cases, families fund the work — especially for interventions and early recovery support. Sometimes individuals invest in themselves directly, particularly when pursuing career navigation. Either way, we’ll clarify options during an introductory call.
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Our model includes six months of continued family and individual support following an intervention. For early recovery or career navigation clients, engagement can be tailored — from short-term to ongoing.
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Yes. We collaborate with therapists, treatment centers, and other providers regularly. Our role is to extend their work into daily life, ensuring that insight and progress don’t stall once someone leaves the clinical setting.
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That’s exactly why we start with a no-pressure consultation. We’ll listen, give you honest feedback, and if we’re not the right fit, we’ll help connect you with trusted resources who might be.
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There are many people who call themselves coaches, and we understand why families might feel cautious. Coaching can be valuable, but in some cases it can also feel unstructured or even opportunistic.
SahaVero is a collective of experienced professionals — recovery specialists, business leaders, and mentors — who bring both lived experience and evidence-based practices to the table. Our founder previously built and sold a successful recovery support company, then went on to lead and coach at the executive level at fortune 500 organizations. We’re returning to this work because we see a gap in the industry: people need competent, practical support that complements treatment and therapy .
Our focus is to provide proven, structured services that help individuals and families move from instability to independence. We are rooted in our experience and evidence rather than trends.