Mr. Thunderclap McGirthy said:
Backyard Gator said:
I think the focus on religion in Alcoholic Anonymous is one of the biggest reasons a lot of people relapse. Well, that, and there is exactly zero science behind their approach. 
So there's no science to admitting you have a problem?  Seeking out someone or something to help you?  Learning about whatever it is that you are dealing with from diabetes to alcohol?  Then supporting yourself by working with and for others?
I assume what the poster is implying is that, despite being the framework of many recovery programs in the US, the documented success rate of twelve step programs is pretty poor.
I agree with that to a point, and I have very mixed feelings about the operation of the recovery industry in this country (and make no mistake, it 
is an industry)--but OTOH, it also isn't very fair to assess the efficacy of a treatment approach on the basis of it being employed in people who don't want to get treated in the first place.
The simple fact is that a large number of people in "treatment" are there because of involvement with the criminal justice system, and are being ordered to participate as a condition of probation. In actuality, many don't want to get sober; they just don't want to go to jail. And in the long term, that works every bit as well as it sounds like it would.
As several other people have said already, the first condition is that the addicted person has to want to change (as the AAers would say, "I can't, God can, 
think I'll let Him"). If the person isn't ready to change, no intervention is going to be successful.                                        
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