One approach relies on a single moment. The other helps families create change over time.
When someone you love is struggling with substance use, the question becomes urgent:
“What actually works to help them change?”
For decades, families have been told to consider a formal intervention—a structured, often confrontational meeting designed to push a loved one into treatment.
But today, there’s a growing shift toward a different approach:
CRAFT (Community Reinforcement and Family Training)
So how do these two approaches compare—and what does the evidence say?
What Is a Traditional Intervention?
A traditional intervention is typically:
- A planned meeting involving family, friends, and sometimes a professional interventionist
- Focused on confronting the individual about their substance use
- Built around a clear ask: enter treatment immediately
- Often includes consequences if the person refuses
This model became widely known through media portrayals and popularized approaches like the Vernon Johnson Intervention Model.
The intention is good:
Families want to break through denial and motivate change.
But the reality is more complex:
- It can feel high-pressure or confrontational
- It often depends on a single moment of readiness
- If it doesn’t work, families are left with “What now?”
What Is CRAFT?
CRAFT (Community Reinforcement and Family Training) is a behavioral, evidence-based approach that teaches families practical skills to:
- Improve communication
- Reduce conflict
- Reinforce positive behaviors
- Set healthy boundaries
- Influence a loved one’s motivation over time
Unlike interventions, CRAFT does not rely on a single event.
Instead, it helps families create the conditions for change—day by day.
The Key Difference
At a high level:
- Interventions try to create change in a moment
- CRAFT helps families build change over time
That distinction matters more than it might seem.
Because substance use—and recovery—is rarely a one-time decision.
What Does the Evidence Say?
CRAFT is one of the most researched approaches for families dealing with substance use.
Research led by Robert J. Meyers and William R. Miller found that:
- ~64–74% of individuals whose families used CRAFT entered treatment
- Compared to ~13–30% for traditional approaches like Al-Anon or confrontation-based methods
More recent studies—including digital and group-based formats—have shown similarly strong outcomes, along with:
- Improved family wellbeing
- Reduced anxiety and depression
- Better relationship functioning
Why Interventions Don’t Always Work
Interventions can be powerful in some cases—but they have structural limitations:
1. They rely on timing
If your loved one isn’t ready in that exact moment, the opportunity can pass.
2. They can trigger defensiveness
Feeling confronted or pressured may lead to withdrawal, anger, or resistance.
3. They don’t teach ongoing skills
Even when successful, families are often left without tools to support what comes next.
Why CRAFT Works Differently
CRAFT aligns more closely with how behavior change actually happens.
1. It builds motivation gradually
Instead of forcing a decision, it helps your loved one experience reasons to change.
2. It reduces conflict
Families learn how to step out of cycles that unintentionally reinforce substance use.
3. It empowers families
You’re not waiting, guessing, or reacting—you’re actively influencing change.
A Better Question: What Do Families Need?
Instead of asking:
“What’s the most powerful way to get them into treatment right now?”
A more effective question might be:
“How can we consistently create conditions that make change more likely?”
That’s where CRAFT stands apart.
Can These Approaches Work Together?
In some cases, yes.
Families who use CRAFT often find that:
- If an intervention becomes necessary, it can be done more effectively and with less conflict
- Or, they may no longer need one at all
Because over time, the dynamic has already started to shift.
The Bottom Line
Interventions focus on a moment.
CRAFT focuses on a process.
And when it comes to something as complex as addiction, process tends to win.
If You’re a Family Member
You don’t have to wait for rock bottom.
And you don’t have to rely on a single, high-stakes conversation.
There are practical, evidence-based skills you can start using right now—regardless of whether your loved one is ready for help.
