http://www.originsrecovery.com/what-abo ... lair-methoThis topic merits its own post. It would appear that the for-profit, corporate recovery industry is being asked about TSM more and more these days. And its response is predictable: it claims that there is no evidence to support the efficacy of TSM, labels our self-help community "TSM drunks" and concludes that alcoholism is a spiritual disease, citing absolutely no scientific data in support of its conclusions.
As a preliminary matter, let's examine the possible motives behind the FOR PROFIT RECOVERY INDUSTRY (I'll call them FPRI for short) as opposed to proponents of TSM. FPRI is a long-established, multi-billion dollar industry that charges in-treatment patients thousands and thousands of dollars. ($50,000 for a single 28-day stint is not uncommon.) Billions of dollars and thousands of jobs are at stake in maintaining the AA model of recovery. In sharp contrast, we here on this board are not making one penny off of TSM. We have no profit motive. We are here for one reason: TSM works and we want to save people a life of misery and premature death. Draw your own conclusions about which side of the argument has credibility and which side of the argument has ulterior motives.
The "critical analysis" of TSM that follows is laughable. It claims that TSM does not work and that research on the subject has been going on all the way back to the 1980s. This is patently false. Naltrexone was around in the 1980s and there were many studies done regarding Naltrexone with abstinence. That is NOT TSM and Naltrexone with abstinence does not work. Alternatively, research on TSM is new and ongoing. Most of the studies are post-2000 and most of the studies -- none referenced in FPRI's attacks -- show that TSM has had a superb, 78% efficacy rate. The Cure for Alcoholism details 72 studies in support of TSM (mostly in Europe), as does the science behind the method section of this Board.
The article goes on to discuss AA's success rate. With empirical data? No. Because AA's own studies -- long since discontinued because of their pathetic efficacy -- conclude that AA has a 95% failure/relapse rate. Not surprisingly, this fact is not contained in FPRI's baseless attack on TSM. What is their empirically-backed, scientific "critical analysis" of AA's success rate? "
We believe [that AA principles] have saved, many, many lives." That is their scientifically-backed data. "We believe." I'm convinced, are you?
The attack continues with a wildly inaccurate summary of TSM. The one blatantly faulty premise contained throughout the article is that drinking on Naltrexone removes the euphoria and thus incentive to drink. Anyone who ever has consumed alcohol on Naltrexone knows that this is false: people still get a buzz drinking on Naltrexone. The buzz is not as euphoric as a non-nal buzz, but it is very potent, nonetheless. Naltrexone does NOT wipe out the euphoria of drinking, it eliminates the effect of endorphins on the brain and occurs on a SUBCONSCIOUS level. TSM works without us being aware that it is working. This fact -- overlooked entirely by this bogus critique of the method -- completely undermines the biggest argument made against TSM, namely, that no alcoholic would adhere to the regimen. This claim has been proven to be entirely false both by the studies (which report a remarkable 90% compliance rate of following the regimen -- The Cure, page 72) and by the posts here of several hundred people. Of the thousands of posts here, you will not find a single person who claims they are not willing to take the drug because it will diminish their high. Not taking the medication is a complete non-issue on this board, other than a few people who report forgetting to take the drug. A handful of people have reported missing the euphoric buzz of drinking without Naltrexone, but not one person has given up on the method for this reason. The studies support this conclusion as well.
The article, laughably claiming to be a "critical analysis", goes on to throw out a bunch of absurd speculative conclusions, based not upon scientific data, but specious claims. Pulled out of no where, and conjuring up images of the 1950's movie, "Reefer Madness", the baseless speculation is clearly aimed at scaring people away from TSM. If TSM does really work, then we will inevitably turn to other, more lethal, addictive drugs. Really? Is this a scientifically-based conclusion or a fear tactic? There is absolutely no scientific data offered to support it so you make the call. And has a single person on this board reported that since they have regained control, they are now using Meth or other drugs? This is laugh-out-loud speculation based upon nothing empirical and completely refuted by the experience of hundreds of people on this board, not to mention the studies. It is also based upon the false theory that we alcoholics suffer some spiritual malady that causes us to want to escape. Where is the scientific data behind this laughable assertion? The dozens of people (over 40, as of this writing) who have regained control here and who have no interest in drinking or other drugs are proof positive this theory is false.
The article also discusses "upregulation" and the fact that TSM creates more opioid receptors in the brain and that if we drink off of Naltrexone even once, we are susceptible to wild binges. Really? Where is the scientific data to support this bogus claim? Hint: there is none. I drank off of Naltrexone for two months and all I got out of it was a very gradual slide back into over-drinking, just like pre-TSM. Hundreds of people here have drank without their Naltrexone without going on a binge. In fact, I don't know of anyone who reported drinking off of Naltrexone once, only to find it so appealing that they quit the method. That is pure fabrication, concocted by a desperate industry, creating false arguments to stir up fear in their potential patients, aimed at nothing more than protecting profits. The fact of the matter is that if you drink off of Naltrexone once, there isn't some wildly euphoric feeling. Personally, I felt the drug still working when I drank without it -- my urge to drink was SHARPLY reduced during the time I drank off of the drug because of pharmacological extinction. My return to unhealthy drinking was very gradual and took weeks. And it immediately went away as soon as I resumed TSM. Numerous people on this board who drank off of Naltrexone report the same thing: not some euphoric binge, but a reduction in consumption precipitated by extinction.
The article goes on to discuss "Sinclair Method drunks." Really? Is that what we are? Because we don't subscribe to the AA model, we are ridiculed and mocked? If that's a "spiritual awakening" -- ridiculing people in dire need of help -- I'd prefer to be in a coma. The fact that we are a large, self-help community, who have not benefited from AA and are desperately searching for life-saving alternatives, should not result in our disparagement. Can you imagine any other patient being ridiculed for seeking alternative treatment? Imagine the cancer patient being told they have a month to live, only to be ridiculed for seeking alternatives. And the ridiculing tone of the attack underlies the irrefutable fact that the FPRI actually has disdain and contempt for the very patients they claim to be serving. How, exactly, are "TSM drunks" any different than the patients the FPRI claim to care about? There is only one reason for this type of disdain: a profit motive. The FPRI knows that if TSM works, they are out of business. There is no other incentive to attack us. And at what cost? Thousands and thousands of people are not being given access to this life-saving treatment. It's nothing short of a disgrace.
Personally, I'm ready to fight these liars. I am willing to go public with my identity to do it. If anyone here has any ideas on how to fight the FPRI or would like to join me, please let me know.