Remember Me
forgot your password?

Are Non-12-step Recovery Approaches Effective?

There are many effective alternatives to the 12-step addiction recovery approach. This article will describe the major treatments and support groups that one might choose if interested in a non-12-step (alternative) approach. These alternatives need to be widely known because individuals who might never attend an AA (Alcoholics Anonymous) meeting might attend treatment or a support group with a different approach. What might not be possible for them in AA might be possible elsewhere. It would benefit everyone if the alternative approaches were as widely known and as easily available as AA and other 12-step groups. Even AA would benefit from the individuals who chose to go elsewhere. Those remaining in AA would know that they were attending because they had freely chosen to attend, not because there might be something better but they couldn't find it!

Let's begin with alternative support groups: SMART Recovery, Women for Sobriety, LifeRing Secular Recovery, Secular Organizations for Sobriety, and Moderation Management. All support abstinence, except Moderation Management, which supports alcohol moderation or abstinence. All are non-profit organizations. All tend to have discussion meetings (with "cross-talk" as opposed to a series of speakers who don't reference each other). Women for Sobriety is the oldest, having started in the mid-1970's. SMART Recovery and Moderation Management are both science based (as opposed to AA's spiritual foundation). The recovery programs offered differ significantly from each other and from 12-step. If they don't hold meetings in your locality there are web-based meetings you can attend.

Are these alternative support groups as effective as AA? We don't know because-this may shock you-from a scientific perspective the effectiveness of AA is unknown. Although it is widely said that "AA is the only thing that works," at best this statement reflects the experience of someone who has been immersed so much in 12-step recovery that they have missed some important facts about recovery. Perhaps the most important fact about recovery is that the majority of individuals who recover do so without attending a support group or treatment (i.e., natural recovery). To be clear, if we have 100 individuals with alcohol problems, what will happen to them is unknown. If we have 100 individuals who have recovered from alcohol problems, the majority of them will have done so using natural recovery.

Do you have a hard time believing that AA is of unknown effectiveness? Consider the comments of two reputable organizations. Every three years the U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services sends a report to Congress entitled Alcohol and Health. The 1990 report states: "The effectiveness of AA has not been scientifically documented, and methodological problems make such an evaluation difficult" (pg. 265). The National Academy of Sciences published in 1990 a massive report entitled Broadening the Base of Treatment for Alcohol Problems. The National Academy of Sciences was established in 1863 by Congress as its advisory body on the application of scientific knowledge to public policy. In the United States there is no higher authority on such applications. This report (commissioned by Congress in 1986) states: "AA is considered by many lay persons and professionals to be the most successful treatment for persons with alcohol problems, despite the lack of well-designed and well-executed studies that can be cited to support or negate the validity of this perception" (pg. 111). These quotes may seem old in this internet age, but the situation has not changed. Nearly 20 years later AA remains relatively unstudied from a scientific perspective.

As to treatments, there are a dozen or more that have substantial scientific evidence of effectiveness. They are quite different from one another. Some treatments are medications, some enhance motivation to change, some reward new non-drinking behaviors, some teach new ways of thinking, some build up a person's negative reactions to drinking (or drugging) using a process called aversive conditioning, some enhance the person's relationship and social skills, and one uses acupuncture. Quite diverse! The bad news is that there is no simple way to answer a question like "how does alcohol treatment work?" Presumably these very different treatments work in very different ways, but we may still "not be seeing the forest for the trees." The good news is that if one treatment does not appeal to you, perhaps another one will. And all of them have much more scientific evidence of their effectiveness than AA does. One introduction to the science behind these treatments is published by the National Institute on Drug Abuse:

http://www.drugabuse.gov/PODAT/PODATIndex.html

This is not to suggest that you should avoid AA. .Its free, widely available, a choice very few will argue with, and likely to introduce you to a large number potential recovery role models. But if you don't like AA, isn't it good to know you have options?

Tom Horvath
A. Tom Horvath, Ph.D., ABPP, is a board certified clinical psychologist and president of Practical Recovery non-12-step alcohol addiction treatment, an addiction treatment facility in La Jolla (San Diego), CA, focusing on collaborative care and self-empowerment.
Rate this Article: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s)
Print Email Re-Publish

Add new Comment



Captcha

  • Latest Medicine Articles
  • More from Tom Horvath

Obesity in Today's Society

By: Wilson.Day | 11/12/2009
Obesity is rapidly becoming one of the greatest health challenges of the 21st century. No disease is more common and causes more unnecessary illness or early death than obesity. Furthermore there is no other single problem that so reduces the quality of life or increases the demand for healthcare services

The Five Problems That Obesity Causes

By: Wilson.Day | 11/12/2009
The first problem of obesity to focus on is the one that many obese people think about the least - you are less likely to live a long life if you are too fat. The life insurance companies have known this for a long time. They know that, for life insurance purposes, the fatter you are the worse the risk you are to them.

Exercise and Activity After the LAP-BAND

By: Wilson.Day | 11/12/2009
Your weight loss will depend on the amount of food you eat and the amount of exercise and activity you undertake. The more you burn up, the thinner you will be. The LAP-BAND works primarily by facilitating a reduced food intake. As you start to lose weight, it becomes easier to be active. The more you take advantage of that, the better weight loss you will have, the healthier you will be and the better you will feel.

Defining and Measuring Obesity

By: Wilson.Day | 11/12/2009
Obesity is a disease in which fat has accumulated to the extent that health is impaired. Note that there are three key components to this definition:

What to Expect After the LAP-BAND Operation

By: Wilson.Day | 11/12/2009
When you wake up from the operation you will have some discomfort. There are two main sources of this discomfort. Firstly, the sites where we passed the tubes through the abdominal wall can be sore, especially the one where the access port is placed.

What You Can Expect Before the LAP-BAND Procedure

By: Wilson.Day | 11/12/2009
After we jointly make the decision to go ahead with the procedure we will arrange for you to have some preliminary tests that are needed to document your general state of health. We may also do some specific measures of your current health problems and we will do some further tests that will minimize any risks associated with anesthesia.

Who is Considered Suitable For the LAP-BAND®?

By: Wilson.Day | 11/12/2009
We take four factors into account when determining whether this might be an appropriate procedure for you. These are the current level of your weight, the problems that this state of obesity generates, the confirmation that you have made significant effort at weight loss by other means and the confidence we have that you understand what you are getting yourself into and have the commitment to fulfill your part of the partnership.

Four Types of Bariatric Surgery and How to Decide Which One is Best For You

By: Wilson.Day | 11/12/2009
The surgical treatment of obesity is called bariatric surgery after the Greek words, baros, meaning "weight," and iatrikos, meaning "the art of healing." This is the most rapidly growing area of surgical practice in the Western world today. This reflects the ability of bariatric surgical procedures to provide a solution to an otherwise insoluble problem and the evolution of safer, less invasive and more conservative forms of procedures.

Coping With Craving

By: Tom Horvath | 16/01/2009 | Self Help
If you have had strong cravings, you may not need a description of one! Like hunger (which is what we call craving for food), craving is a complete (cognitive, emotional, and physical) experience. Your mind is distracted. You feel tense and/or frustrated. You get physically uncomfortable. Craving motivates us to...

How do I Choose the Right Treatment Center: Individual or Group Sessions?

By: Tom Horvath | 16/01/2009 | Medicine
Are you searching for the "right" treatment center for you or a loved one? This article is written to suggest that pre-established "programs" of treatment are not the best approach. Rather, there are as many roads to recovery as there are individuals. Treatment centers need to support you on your...

Teach Teens Drinking Before it Kills Them

By: Tom Horvath | 15/11/2008 | Home & Family
Alcohol prohibition in the US lasted from 1919 to 1933. Prohibition continues for those under age 21. Prohibition was repealed because it was violated so often. Given how much people like to drink, prohibition as a public policy was not realistic. In this article I suggest that we are seeing...

Are Non-12-step Recovery Approaches Effective?

By: Tom Horvath | 14/11/2008 | Medicine
There are many effective alternatives to the 12-step addiction recovery approach. This article will describe the major treatments and support groups that one might choose if interested in a non-12-step (alternative) approach. These alternatives need to be widely known because individuals who might never attend an AA (Alcoholics Anonymous) meeting...

Why Would Someone Choose a Non-12-step Recovery Approach?

By: Tom Horvath | 14/11/2008 | Medicine
If you were a woman with breast cancer, you'd probably want to know that there were several treatment options you had: radical mastectomy, lumpectomy, radiation, chemotherapy, holistic services, nutritional approaches, some combination of these options, or doing nothing, with new options emerging continually. You might be inclined to let your...

Substance Abuse Evaluations in Child Custody Cases

By: Tom Horvath | 29/09/2008 | Self Help
I make a number of assumptions when conducting a substance use evaluation as part of a litigation process: 1) the individual's use is usually not less than the individual reports, but it might often be more (or much more); 2) inaccurate accusations of substance abuse are common because there is...

Can Drinking and Drugging Improve Your Social Life?

By: Tom Horvath | 29/09/2008 | Self Help
Yes, but... In the first section let's discuss how drugs and alcohol can actually have a beneficial effect on your social life (or at least appear to). In the second section let's discuss why drug and alcohol use can still be a bad idea for you. One of the most frequent reasons...

Submit Your Articles Free: Signup
Article Categories




Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved. (0.07, 0, w1)