Below is a document I’ve prepared at the request of the Recovery Alliance Initiative (RAI) leadership. It outlines some basic information that will be helpful for community-based leaders to better see the big picture of the RAI model, as it applies to helping the individual.
Recovery Alliance Initiative: Proposed Principles and Stages of Care
Principle 1: Community-based peer support personnel can be trained in both harm reduction (HR) models and recovery coach (RC) methods. This would maximize their capabilities and flexibility.
Principle 2: As substance use disorder (SUD) severity rises, complexity and chronicity of the disorder tends to increase. For SUD moderate to severe, following the onset of sobriety, a 5-year model of care is best practice.
Principle 3: Stages of care span: primary prevention, harm reduction, engagement/persuasion, stabilization, active treatment, relapse prevention, and recovery management.
Principle 4: Peer support personnel should have a working knowledge of each stage of care.
Principle 5: Each stage of care can exist on a continuum from the more traditional model (TM) of evidence-based practices (more clinically derived) to the recovery model (RM) built on the BHRM project’s recovery management principles (more person-centered).
Principle 6: While the individual resides within any one stage of care, their peer support helper can address them with different methods (HR vs RC) on a per-problem basis, regardless of their general stage of care.

Very thought, practical and useful. Thank you! Mark Sanders
Thank you, Mark. This particular document that is linked in the post up above is one I would strongly suspect you would enjoy reading. It’s in story form and not all that long. Hope you enjoy it.
Brian
Peer Support, or Harm Reduction, or Recovery Coaching? – Recovery Review