I noticed a statement about this in the FAQ section, and thought I would describe the position that was told to me by Alcoholics Anonymous's General Service Office. It also helps to understand how AA is structured.
AA isn't a single organization. It is actually thousands of small clubs that all receive their publications and general direction from a central organization called the General Service Office, or GSO. The small clubs aren't in any way lead or organized by the GSO, the GSO just provides them with materials and general direction.
It is against GSO policy to say anything one way or the other about any treatment for alcoholism besides the twelve step AA method. In a very real way, the GSO does NOT exist to provide help for alcoholics, it exists solely to encourage and supply the twelve step AA method. If that happens to actually help alcoholics, that's all the better because it encourages more people to try the twelve step method. It's like the old joke that humans are a virus's method of making more viruses. It sounds backwards, but one of the things that the study of memetics demonstrates is that ideas are like that. If we aren't careful, an idea can become more important than the people it's supposed to be serving.
The individual chapters are exactly that - individual. They get all of the central organization that they're going to get from the GSO. They don't influence each other much, and they vary in quality and philosophy considerably. Some of the chapter leaders that I've talked to have told me that they would consider it, but really I think that the primary issue is that actually drinking is anathema to everything they teach. That one issue has prevented the majority of people I've talked to from trying it.
So the AA is in the position of being a blind competitor, an animal without conscious guidance. It's been happy and unguided largely because it has nothing resembling reasonable competition. It's complacent in its superiority, and it sees no reason to change. I don't know what it's going to do when the Sinclair Method actually starts to threaten it.
P.S., here is a copy of the post that I made in the Int Ice forums on June 8th, 2006 after my phone call with AA. I wish I'd remembered to write down her name.
Robert Rapplean wrote:
This conversation happened last week. It was so offputting and meaningless that I didn't think to post it at the time, but here's the basics.
I managed to get hold of AA's press department, and the lady there told me some extremely interesting things. She told me that they don't treat alcoholics, they just provide them with direction and materials necessary to get together and help each other. They didn't have any interest in promoting pharmacological extinction because it was against their preamble to "support causes", and that they would not suggest any form of treatment to their people.
The lady also absolutely insisted that AA was not a form of group therapy, nor was it a treatment. She wouldn't specify why exactly there was a difference between what they did and the meaning of those terms, but absolutely insisted that she had a degree in that field, and that group therapy meant something entirely different.
In any case, the crux is that they have absolutely no interest in this treatment.