Family Therapy Services

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a family psychologist or a family therapist?
For most families, a trained family therapist is the right starting point. A psychologist holds a doctoral license and typically focuses on testing and individual treatment, while family therapy centers on guided sessions with the family together. Our sessions are led by experienced therapists under physician-led clinical oversight.
Yes. Family therapy often helps loved ones understand addiction and recovery while improving communication and rebuilding trust within relationships.
Parents, siblings, partners, and other close relatives who play an important role in the person’s life. The therapist helps decide who should be in the room based on the goals, and the group can change as the work develops.
Yes. Families participate in scheduled sessions as part of a loved one’s treatment program, and those sessions are coordinated with the rest of the clinical plan rather than running separately from it.
Disagreement is expected and workable. The therapist guides the conversation so every perspective gets heard respectfully, and the disagreement itself often shows the exact pattern the family came in to change.

Family therapy services at Dynamic Behavioral Health bring parents, siblings, partners, and other close relatives into the clinical work, either as a standalone service or as scheduled sessions within a loved one’s treatment program. A licensed therapist guides the sessions, and the focus is practical: communication, trust, boundaries, and the roles each person plays.

When Families Need a Therapist in the Room

Families usually look for therapy when talking on their own has stopped working. The patterns are recognizable: communication that turns into the same argument every time, stress and confusion around a loved one’s mental health condition, emotional distance that has crept in over months or years, or a major life change the family has not adjusted to together.

None of that means a family is broken. It means the family system is under strain, and the people inside it are too close to the patterns to change them alone. A therapist in the room changes the physics of the conversation: everyone gets heard, nobody has to referee, and the discussion moves toward something usable instead of circling.

The strain is often heaviest when one family member is in treatment. Loved ones want to help and do not know how, and the guessing itself becomes a source of conflict. That situation is not a side case for us; it is one of the two main ways families come here.

The reasons families arrive are not always about one person’s condition. Divorce or separation, the adjustment work of a blended family, and grief after a loss all reshape a family’s structure faster than its habits can keep up. And therapy is not reserved for major problems; families also use it simply to communicate better and strengthen relationships before the strain becomes the story.

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Two Ways Families Work With Us

Family therapy at Dynamic Behavioral Health runs in two modes. The first is standalone: your family schedules sessions with a therapist to work on communication, conflict, or a transition the family is facing, independent of any other treatment.

The second runs alongside care. When a loved one is in our residential treatment or outpatient programs, families participate in scheduled sessions as part of the treatment plan. These sessions help the family understand the condition and the recovery process, rebuild trust where it has worn thin, and learn what useful support actually looks like, because encouragement lands differently when the people giving it understand what they are supporting. Progress made in a program holds better when the family system the person returns to has done its own work.

Both modes use the same clinical approach and the same team. The difference is simply whether the family is the whole picture or part of a larger treatment plan.

A Family Systems Approach

The clinical view behind the work is simple: emotional and behavioral concerns are rarely just individual struggles. When one member of a family is having difficulties, it shows up in the communication patterns, the relationships, and the overall functioning of the household, which is why treating the person while ignoring the system around them so often produces short-lived results. Family therapy identifies those patterns and works on them directly.

That is also why the skills taught in sessions are family-level skills: shared problem-solving, emotional awareness of one another, and ways of responding to challenges that do not require anyone to be the villain of the story.

The Conditions Behind the Strain

Family strain usually orbits something specific. A parent’s depression that the household has been working around for a year, a sibling’s anxiety that dictates family plans, a partner’s substance use tangled together with their mental health, or the aftermath of a suicide attempt that nobody knows how to talk about. When a condition is driving the strain, family therapy pairs with treatment for the condition itself: depression treatment, anxiety treatment, dual diagnosis care, and support for suicidal thoughts each have their own clinical track here, and family sessions run alongside them rather than instead of them.

Naming the condition matters because it changes the goal. The family stops trying to fix the person and starts learning to support the treatment, which is a job families can actually do.

What Happens in Family Therapy Sessions

The work starts with a family assessment: the therapist evaluates the family’s dynamics, communication patterns, and what each person hopes will change. Goals are set together, out loud, so the family is working toward the same thing rather than four private versions of it.

Sessions from there are guided discussions. The therapist facilitates so every member can express thoughts and feelings productively, and steps in when conversations drift toward the old ruts. Alongside the talking, families build concrete skills: active listening, saying hard things without escalation, and reading the emotional subtext that family members often miss in each other.

The later work is structural. Sessions focus on boundaries, roles, and expectations: who carries what in the family, which patterns need renegotiating, and how trust gets rebuilt in increments rather than declarations. Families leave with changes they can practice at home between sessions, which is where the actual repair happens.

What Changes When the Family Does the Work

The changes families report are specific rather than abstract. Communication improves and conflict drops, because the recurring argument finally gets examined instead of repeated. Emotional understanding and empathy strengthen, because sessions surface what each person has been carrying silently. Loved ones learn how to provide support that helps rather than support that smothers, and the person at the center of the concern feels encouraged instead of managed.

For families supporting someone through treatment, there is a second layer: recovery holds better when the home someone returns to has changed along with them. The program does its work in the facility; family therapy makes sure the progress has somewhere to live afterward.

Family Therapy vs Individual Therapy

Which one does our situation need?

 

Family Therapy

Individual Therapy

Who is in the room

The family together, with one therapist guiding

You and your therapist, one on one

The focus

Relationship patterns, communication, roles, trust

Your own symptoms, thoughts, and goals

What changes

How the family functions as a system

How you cope, respond, and feel

Confidentiality

A shared space with ground rules the family sets together

Private between you and your therapist

Commonly paired with

A loved one’s treatment program

Any level of care

 

Many people do both, and the two do different jobs: individual therapy [/individual-therapy/] works on what is happening inside you, family therapy works on what is happening between you. If a loved one is already in treatment with us, the treatment plan usually answers this question; if your family is starting fresh, the initial assessment does.

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Family Therapy in Tarzana

Sessions take place at our Tarzana facility on the Ventura Boulevard corridor, and location matters more for family therapy than for most services: every session requires several schedules to line up, and a location that works for one person but not the rest is how family therapy quietly falls apart. For families across the San Fernando Valley, access from the 101 and Ventura Boulevard keeps weekly attendance realistic for everyone involved.

Families also join sessions here while a loved one is in our residential program, so the people doing the supporting and the person receiving care do the work in the same place, with the same clinical team reading both sides of it.

How to Start

Call (820) 200-5275 or send the form on our admissions page. If your family is starting standalone sessions, the first step is a family assessment where the therapist maps the dynamics and sets goals with you. If your loved one is beginning or already in treatment with us, tell the admissions team you want family involvement and it gets built into the plan.

If the situation at home involves immediate danger to anyone, call or text 988 or contact emergency services first. Therapy is for the patterns; safety comes before the patterns.

Insurance and Cost

Coverage for family therapy depends on your plan and on whether sessions stand alone or run inside a structured treatment program, and the fastest way to know is to ask us to check. Send the secure verification form on our admissions page or call (820) 200-5275, and our admissions team reviews your policy and explains your options within minutes, confidentially and with no obligation. If your loved one is already in treatment with us, ask the admissions team how family sessions fit into the existing plan before assuming anything about cost.

Medically reviewed by Courtney S. Scott, MD, Medical Director at Dynamic Behavioral Health.