Committee No. 1
“Question 2. Can the Fellowship share experience and make recommendations on how we can respond positively to the recovery agenda and external initiatives in the professional community?
Background
The
recent emphasis on recovery (as an alternative to harm reduction) by
Government and its Agencies and engagement with 12-Step Mutual-aid
Groups is likely to impact on the Fellowship and increase the number
of newcomers.
Twelve Step Facilitation by healthcare and other professionals has been acknowledged as an effective recovery pathway for suffering alcoholics in the US and could gain traction here.
Issues
to consider include:
• Cooperating
with other organisations
• Safeguarding the Fellowship
• Carrying the message (PI opportunities)
• Capacity and willingness to absorb higher numbers of newcomers
• Learning from the US experience of Twelve Step Facilitation
• Liaison with substance misuse services e.g. Recovery Champions
• Safeguarding the Fellowship
• Carrying the message (PI opportunities)
• Capacity and willingness to absorb higher numbers of newcomers
• Learning from the US experience of Twelve Step Facilitation
• Liaison with substance misuse services e.g. Recovery Champions
The
Government is keen to work with facilities that reduce the burdens to
society (Policing, NHS, Housing etc) resulting from substance abuse
including Alcohol. The cost to society is significant in all manner
of support areas which could be reduced with the right programmes of
recovery. It is an opportune time to work with the government in its
endeavours to encourage people into Recovery programs.
The
key to the Government’s success in this area could be greatly aided
by AA working in co-operation with the various bodies involved in
this initiative whilst also reaching out to more alcoholics who may
then wish to seek help with their drinking problem through coming to
AA.
The
following was written about Mark Gilman, the Recovery Champion for
Public Health England, in the Guardian newspaper on 11th June 2013 …
Mark Gilman is a man with a mission. In his role as England's addiction/recovery champion, it's his aim for the country's addiction treatment services to tap into what he sees as an underused resource: mutual aid groups, such as Alcoholics Anonymous....
These
groups, known as fellowships, are based on the premise that there are
12 steps to recovering from addiction, from the first, of admitting
powerlessness in the face of addiction, to taking stock of personal
failings and past wrongs and handing over life's decisions to an
unspecified "power greater than ourselves". The 12th and
final step comes – after a spiritual awakening – with carrying
the fellowship's message to others struggling with addiction. And now
Gilman is touring the country trying to cajole local health
commissioners and providers into referring more service users to
these groups...
His
views dovetail with the government's desire to make addiction
treatment more focused on recovery. "Suddenly, now, the focus on
the importance of friends casts [12-step fellowships] in a brand new
light, whereby we are encouraged – and we are encouraging others –
to re-evaluate things like AA," he says.
He
told a global addiction conference in May 2013 about his new
enthusiasm for 12-step mutual aid groups, saying afterwards: "I
bet those doctors wondered what the hell I was talking about: 'What,
Public Health England thinks the answer is to go to meetings which
have been going since 1935? That are free? Duh!' But actually, yeah."
And,
he says, during a time of straitened local authority budgets, it
helps that support from mutual aid groups "is available 24 hours
a day, 365 days a year, and is completely free of charge".
BENEFITS OF TWELVE STEP PROGRAMMES & FELLOWSHIPS
BENEFITS OF TWELVE STEP PROGRAMMES & FELLOWSHIPS
• Potentially
fills the “recovery” gap/shortfall in current service
provision
• Enhances chances of individuals achieving sustained sobriety (research data)
• Increased opportunity to carry the message (subject to willingness and capacity)
• Increased membership – more lives saved”
• Enhances chances of individuals achieving sustained sobriety (research data)
• Increased opportunity to carry the message (subject to willingness and capacity)
• Increased membership – more lives saved”
Cheerio
The
Fellas (Friends
of Alcoholics Anonymous)
PS See also aacultwatch forum (section 4)
PPS To use “comment” system simply click on “Comments” tab below this article and sign in. All comments go through a moderation stage
wow This seriously helped a lot! Im a deaf person and none of the youtube videos have helped as I cant hear the questions and the automatic subtitles are crap! Thank you! I always try and look for show me tell me questions for my car pergeot 107 and cant find any! I have suscribed as visual aids really help! Got my driving test tomorrow its more or less my 8th/10th Time Ive been out that many times I should know it by now lol! Keep up the good work!Thank you so much!!
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cfr 21 part 820