If the (rather few) AA defenders on this thread would bother themselves to
actually read the links I've posted, they would have found details of at least (4) professionally run, double-blind studies that demonstrate the following:
1. AA's success rate is a maximum of 5-13% (defined as those who initially show up at AA and and are still sober 1 year later - not 1 in 20 are still around, from my experience at 1000's of meetings, it's more like 1 in 50.) For those who attend, just think of the quantity of newcomers who show up and are still around 1 year later? A few of the studies demonstrate that less than 1 in 600 people are still sober 10 years later). AA's own past triennial surveys also agree with the 5% figure , although nowadays AA has refused to release the type of data from the survey that would confirm that.
2. Several studies clearly show that attendance at AA (besides giving one - on average - only a 1 in 20 chance of succeeding) significantly increased the users level of dangerous binge drinking.
3. Demonstrates that attending AA increases the abusers chance of dying in comparison to doing nothing at all. That is, AA actually was worse than doing nothing.
With the above conclusions - coupled with the fact that in dozens of high level legal opinions, courts have ruled that the AA program is a religion - it is clear that as a solution to problem drinking, AA is worse than doing nothing, and for many it actually increases both the amount of binge drinking as well as mortally rate for those (usually forced by the legal system) who attend - a natural result of having 'powerlessness' and a fantasy (judeochristian religion) pounded into the heads of vulnerable people.
actually read the links I've posted, they would have found details of at least (4) professionally run, double-blind studies that demonstrate the following:
1. AA's success rate is a maximum of 5-13% (defined as those who initially show up at AA and and are still sober 1 year later - not 1 in 20 are still around, from my experience at 1000's of meetings, it's more like 1 in 50.) For those who attend, just think of the quantity of newcomers who show up and are still around 1 year later? A few of the studies demonstrate that less than 1 in 600 people are still sober 10 years later). AA's own past triennial surveys also agree with the 5% figure , although nowadays AA has refused to release the type of data from the survey that would confirm that.
2. Several studies clearly show that attendance at AA (besides giving one - on average - only a 1 in 20 chance of succeeding) significantly increased the users level of dangerous binge drinking.
3. Demonstrates that attending AA increases the abusers chance of dying in comparison to doing nothing at all. That is, AA actually was worse than doing nothing.
With the above conclusions - coupled with the fact that in dozens of high level legal opinions, courts have ruled that the AA program is a religion - it is clear that as a solution to problem drinking, AA is worse than doing nothing, and for many it actually increases both the amount of binge drinking as well as mortally rate for those (usually forced by the legal system) who attend - a natural result of having 'powerlessness' and a fantasy (judeochristian religion) pounded into the heads of vulnerable people.
