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The phone call came at 2 AM.
Your child is struggling. They need help. And you'll do anything, pay anything, to save them. That's exactly what they're counting on. While you're Googling treatment centers in a panic, someone else is calculating how much your fear is worth. They're not asking "How can we help this family heal?" They're asking "How much insurance does this kid have?" Welcome to the world of body brokering, where your child becomes inventory, and their pain becomes profit. The Ugly Truth About Patient Trafficking Let me be direct: body brokering is human trafficking dressed up in recovery language. According to investigations by NPR and federal prosecutors, here's how it works: Unethical middlemen, called "body brokers", receive kickbacks ranging from $500 to $5,000 for every person they refer to certain treatment centers. These brokers target the most vulnerable: young people in early recovery, desperate parents, anyone with good health insurance. They offer plane tickets. Cash. Drugs. Free rent. Whatever it takes to get your child through the door of a facility that will bill your insurance for tens, sometimes hundreds, of thousands of dollars. And here's the part that will make you sick: many of these facilities are designed to keep people cycling through the system, not actually heal them. Why? Because a person in genuine recovery stops being profitable. The Relapse-for-Profit Model One mother, Staci Katz, keeps three binders full of treatment bills for her son Dillon. Five years of care. Over $600,000 in charges. Among the costs: $9,500 for just five urine tests. Fifty-nine separate treatment stays. He's still struggling. That's not treatment failure. That's treatment design. Research published by the National Institutes of Health documents how body brokers incentivize relapse. As one treatment professional described: "They'll influence the kids at that program to leave the program, relapse, and then they'll pay them money to come over to this other program... these kids have developed this very strong habit, if not addiction, to relapse because it's being incentivized with money." Kids learn quickly: your sobriety costs you your free housing, your spending money, your "friends" in the system. Stay clean, lose everything. Relapse, get paid. We're teaching young people that recovery is the problem. The Scale of the Problem This isn't isolated. Federal cases reveal the scope:
Why Families Keep Falling for It You're a good parent. You research. You ask questions. You read reviews online. And still, you end up handing your child over to predators. How? Because the system preys on exactly what makes you a good parent: your love, your fear, and your willingness to trust professionals. Body brokers don't look like criminals. They look like peer counselors. Like concerned alumni. Like that kind person at the support group who "knows a great place" and offers to help with the referral. Treatment centers don't advertise that they pay kickbacks. They have beautiful websites. Testimonials. Credentials that mean nothing because, as Congressional testimony confirms, there are no national standards of care for residential addiction treatment. No shared definition of success. No consistent expectations. No real accountability. Families in crisis are vulnerable. And the industry knows it. The Questions You Should Be Asking (That Most Centers Hope You Won't) If someone offers to help you find treatment for your loved one, here's what you need to know: RED FLAGS THAT SCREAM "BODY BROKER": Based on documented fraud cases and investigative reporting:
QUESTIONS LEGITIMATE FACILITIES SHOULD ANSWER CLEARLY: Verify credentials:
The Real Problem: We're Trying to Fix People in Isolation Here's what twenty-plus years of working with families has taught me: Most rehab doesn't fail because people aren't ready. It fails because the model was never designed to hold what real healing demands. It wasn't built for complexity. It wasn't built for relational repair. It wasn't built for long-term transformation. It was built to bill insurance. As one Congressional testimony put it: "We are incentivizing failure. This is a relapse model, not a recovery model." The scandal isn't just what treatment centers do. It's what they ignore: the family system. Think about it: We spend $30,000 for 30 days of residential care, then send someone back to the exact same family dynamics, communication patterns, and unresolved pain that contributed to the problem in the first place. And we act surprised when it doesn't work. MY PERSPECTIVE: A Different Way Forward What follows is my professional framework, developed over two decades of family coaching—not established medical consensus, but a relational approach that I've seen transform families. Family WellthCare™: Prevention Through Emotional CapitalWhat if I told you that prevention isn't about controlling your child's behavior? What if it's about transforming the emotional ecosystem they're growing up in? That's Family WellthCare™, and it's the opposite of body brokering in every way. Body brokering asks: "How much can we extract from this crisis?" Family WellthCare™ asks: "How do we build resilience before crisis hits?" Here's the truth nobody in the treatment industry wants you to hear: Your family doesn't need to wait for rock bottom to start healing. You can start building emotional capital right now. Today. In your home. What Is Emotional Capital? I define emotional capital as the reservoir of trust, communication skills, emotional regulation, and relational safety that families build over time, the same way you build financial wealth. It's what makes it safe for your child to come to you when they're struggling, instead of turning to substances. It's what helps you respond to their pain with curiosity instead of control. It's what breaks generational cycles of dysfunction and creates a legacy of connection. The Proactive Path: Five Things You Can Do Right Now These are practical strategies I teach families in my coaching practice: 1. Build Emotional Literacy in Your HomeStart naming emotions without judgment. Not "Don't be angry," but "I see you're angry. Tell me what that feels like in your body." Teach your kids that all feelings are valid information, not problems to fix. 2. Practice Co-Regulation, Not ControlWhen your child is dysregulated (angry, anxious, shut down), they don't need correction. They need your regulated nervous system to help them find their way back. Research on attachment and parent-child co-regulation shows that children's developing nervous systems are profoundly shaped by their caregivers' emotional state. Your calm becomes their calm. Take three deep breaths. Soften your face. Lower your voice. Then respond. 3. Create Predictable Family RhythmsFamily dinners. Weekly check-ins. Consistent bedtimes. Not because you're rigid, but because predictability creates safety for developing nervous systems. 4. Set Boundaries Without Shame"I love you, and I won't enable this behavior" is very different from "You're a disappointment." Boundaries protect the relationship. Shame destroys it. 5. Invest in Your Own Regulation FirstYou can't teach your child emotional skills you don't have. Period. If you're reactive, anxious, or shut down, that's what you're modeling, no matter what words you use. DOCUMENTED FACTS vs. MY PROFESSIONAL PERSPECTIVE Let me be clear about what's what: DOCUMENTED FACTS ABOUT BODY BROKERING: (Supported by federal investigations, court cases, and published research)
(Based on 20+ years coaching families, not claiming to be medical consensus)
I share my framework because I've seen it work. But you deserve to know what's documented fact versus what's my professional philosophy. The Bottom Line: Your Family Deserves Better Body brokering exists because we've built an industry that profits from desperation instead of investing in prevention. But you don't have to participate in that system. You don't have to wait for crisis. You don't have to hand your child over to strangers who see them as a commission check. You can start building emotional wealth today, and that wealth will protect your family from predators who traffic in pain. Here's what I know after two decades of this work: Families don't fail because they don't love enough. They struggle because they were never taught how to love in ways that build resilience, emotional safety, and genuine connection. That's changeable. That's learnable. That's exactly what Family WellthCare™ teaches. What Happens Next Is Up to You You have two paths in front of you: Path One: Wait for crisis. React from fear. Hand your child to a system designed to recycle them, not restore them. Path Two: Start building emotional capital now. Learn the skills. Transform the family system. Create the kind of home where your child doesn't need to escape. One path makes you a customer in a predatory industry. The other makes you a leader in your family's transformation. If you're tired of feeling powerless, if you're ready to do the deeper work, if you want to build a family legacy of emotional wealth that protects your children from exploitation, I'm here. Let's change the story. Not through treatment centers and crisis management, but through proactive, strategic, family-centered healing that lasts. Because you deserve better than body brokers. Your child deserves better than being somebody's payday. And your family deserves the chance to heal together—before the system tries to tear you apart. VERIFY EVERYTHING To report suspected body brokering:
Ready to start building Family WellthCare™? Let's talk about what proactive family wellness looks like for your situation. Because the best time to prevent crisis was ten years ago. The second best time is right now. Timothy Harrington, Family WellthCare™ Coach Connect with me: https://calendly.com/tim-sustainablerecovery/50min Sources Referenced:
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AuthorTimothy Harrington's purpose is to assist the family members of a loved one struggling with problematic drug use and/or behavioral health challenges in realizing their innate strength and purpose. Archives
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