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What AA Has All Wrong
Beginning with the word “Alcoholic”
I’ve been a vocal critic of AA, but in case you haven’t read any of my previous articles, let me take a second to tell you why.
Alcoholics Anonymous — the most widely known and used support group for alcohol abuse — has an 8–12% success rate by its own best guess estimates.
That’s something the average person is not aware of.
It’s also the foundation for roughly 90% of the rehabs in the US and utilized by most state courts.
When 90% of the recovery system uses one program with an 8–12% success rate — that’s a big problem.
The need for multiple methods of recovery — therapy, medications, secular support groups, etc. — promoted equally is paramount if we are ever to see the sobriety success rate climb.
I may be a foolish optimist, but it can be done. Provided enough people speak up.
Three myths that AA perpetuates…
1. You’re either a “real alcoholic” — or you are not one.