Helping someone with an addiction in Chafford Hundred starts with understanding, not enabling. Whether a family member, partner, or friend is struggling with alcohol or drug addiction, your support can make a life-changing difference — but it needs to be the right kind of support. This guide covers how to have the conversation, where to get professional help in Chafford Hundred, and how to look after yourself too.
Showing 1 CQC-registered centres from Thurrock (4 km away) — these centres may accept referrals.
Watching someone you love struggle with addiction is devastating. It is common to feel helpless, angry, scared, and exhausted — often all at once. The most important thing to understand is that addiction is a medical condition, not a moral failure. Your loved one is not choosing addiction — their brain has been changed by substance use in ways that make stopping extremely difficult without help.
The most effective things you can do are: encourage them to seek professional help (offer to go with them to the GP or call Frank together), learn about addiction and the available support in Chafford Hundred, set clear and loving limits around behaviours that are harmful to you (enabling is not helping), look after your own mental health (Al-Anon, Adfam, or counselling), and be patient — recovery is rarely a straight line.
You cannot force someone to get well, and trying to control their addiction often leads to burnout and resentment. Adfam (adfam.org.uk) and Al-Anon (al-anonuk.org.uk) offer specific support designed for families — they can help you navigate this incredibly difficult situation.
Source: ONS Drug misuse deaths 2023 release. Data covers South East England — the NHS region serving Chafford Hundred. Drug-related deaths are defined as deaths related to drug poisoning, drug misuse and dependence.