Medication
issues
The abuses of this policy by cult groups and members have already been documented and despite their apparent compliance on the matter they still continue. To quote the policy:
The General Service Conference which represents the Group Conscience of our whole Fellowship has on a number of occasions made specific recommendations in respect of members advising on matters of a medical nature:
The abuses of this policy by cult groups and members have already been documented and despite their apparent compliance on the matter they still continue. To quote the policy:
The General Service Conference which represents the Group Conscience of our whole Fellowship has on a number of occasions made specific recommendations in respect of members advising on matters of a medical nature:
"...
recommends that members of AA should not, under any circumstances,
meddle in the relationship between doctor and patient, especially in
matters of treatment and medication. AA's position is and should
always be non-interference in such matters ...' 'Our society
therefore will prudently cleave to its single purpose; the carrying
of the message to the alcoholic who still suffers.'
(GSO York)
(GSO York)
[DAF
correspondence – see Trans 1 on site]
Potential
responses
The AA
guidelines on this matter should be communicated to all newcomers as
a matter of the greatest priority. The potentially life threatening
nature of this misinformation requires that all members are made
fully aware of the AA stance and ensure that that guideline is
implemented in full.
More on
prescription drugs
As
indicated above one of the distinctive features of cult groups is
that their members frequently insist that those AA members who are on
prescribed medication are “unsponsorable”. It is of course the
case that each member is free to choose to sponsor or not to sponsor
another member and that the criteria that they may employ in making
that decision may vary considerably. However it is not within the
remit of an individual to decide whether those who fall into that
category are beyond the pale insofar as sponsorship is concerned or
indeed whether they should be totally excluded from participation in
the recovery programme.
It is part
of the cult ethos that they transmit a more fundamental and truer
message than that conveyed by mainstream AA; a significant part of
that message is reflected in their stance on medication. This view is
espoused on the basis that in their “experience” members on
medication cannot recover unless they abandon the use of this
treatment. We quote from a copy of a letter we have received in which
a member gives an account of a conversation he had with an attendee
at one of the Visions groups. He reports that their perspective can
be encapsulated in the following way: “If you stop taking
medication God will look after you and we can ‘sponsor’ you. You
will not get sober or complete the 12 steps of recovery unless you do
stop”.
Their
assumption seems to be that where a member has been prescribed a
regime involving the use of medication that they are automatically
deemed to be avoiding the alcohol issue and replacing one addiction
with another. What these individuals forget is that AA as such does
not get involved in outside issues (drug use etc); our Fellowship and
programme deal only with problems relating to alcohol use. We do not
have the experience or the qualifications to offer any kind of
diagnosis on the use of medications of this kind and certainly not of
their impact on recovery.
Nevertheless
according to these self-appointed “professionals” depression has
been re-diagnosed as self pity (in one instance that we know of this
masterly insight was presented not by a psychiatrist or
psychoanalyst, nor by a general practitioner or consultant – no,
this profound conclusion was arrived at via the services of a
plumber!).
So we have
arrived at the situation where newcomers to AA are advised and,
in some cases, directed to discontinue their use of medication
prior to being taken on as a sponsee, and this without reference to
an intervention by a health professional. In some circumstances where
local pressure has been placed upon the cult groups to abandon this
policy they have publicly recanted but we believe so central is this
perspective to their fundamentalist approach that it is still the
case that privately they hold to this dangerous view.
The AA
guidelines on the matter are very clear and are frequently
communicated to the extent that most members and groups cannot fail
to be aware of them. Yet the cult groups and their followers continue
to ignore wider AA “experience” and uphold this position. It
would require a completely blinkered perception or arrogance of the
highest degree to persist to give out advice that is quite obviously
dangerous and yet this they do.
This has
undoubtedly contributed to a great deal of entirely unnecessary
suffering and in some extreme cases to suicide (see here). This we regard as
both unacceptable and inexcusable.