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A.A. Success Rates, A.A. History, Alcoholics Anonymous
History
AA And Its Success Rates
A
Contemporary Brief
A.A. and its Success Rates - Alcoholics Anonymous Success
RatesDick B. - Copyright 2004
You can find much
more complete and detailed summaries of A.A. success rates in my titles God and
Alcoholism, Why Early AA Succeeded, The Oxford Group and Alcoholics Anonymous,
The Good Book and The Big Book and When Early AAs Were Cured and Why.
A.A. Success Rates, A.A. History, Alcoholics Anonymous
History
You can also find some new, surprising, and welcome details in the work of
Richard K. on early AA cures. He documents over a decade of comments and news
articles reporting the cures in early AA. He documents the first forty pioneers
as to geographical area, sobriety dates, and ultimate outcomes. Richard has
three titles which should be in your library if you want accurate information on
early AA success rates and cures.
After fourteen years of research and writing, and also building on Richard K.'s
recent splendid research and writing, I believe the following facts can be
sustained and documented:
1. The statement that all or most of the 40 AA pioneers got drunk or died drunk
is without any foundation whatever. Some of those whose personal stories were
included in the multilith and First Edition Big Book may have gotten drunk or
even died drunk. But a list of these people is not congruous with the carefully
documented list of the pioneers and their successes.
2. In early Akron AA and then in early Cleveland AA, names, addresses, phone
numbers, and data about sobriety, relapses, and ultimate outcomes were
commonplace. I personally have copies of Anne Smith's address book which
contains data on many of the pioneers. On the walls at Dr. Bob's Home in Akron,
there are pictures of a number of these pioneers. There are several written
rosters of each and every early AA with names, dates of sobriety, dates of
death, and ultimate sobriety outcome. There is a written list of the early
Cleveland AAs as well as rosters kept by individual Cleveland AA groups. I
either have copies of all of these or have sent them on to the Griffith House
Library at Bill Wilson's birthplace in East Dorset, Vermont.
A.A. Success Rates, A.A. History, Alcoholics Anonymous
History
3. Careful reviews by Richard K. of the early AAs show convincingly that when
Bill and Bob counted noses in 1938, there were forty pioneers who had maintained
sobriety, some for as long as two years. There was a much higher proportion of
successes among the Akron and Ohio people than from those on the New York and
East Coast scene.
4. In counting those who were and those who weren't successful in early AA, one
must eliminate a number of candidates. For one thing, there definitely were
those who floated in and out and never really tried the rigorous program that
Dr. Bob conducted in Akron and that Frank Amos reported to John D. Rockefeller,
Jr. In other words, when you see the rosters, you see the names and data of
people who often were personally known to Sue Smith Windows (Dr. Bob s daughter)
and confirmed to me personally and to a number of other researchers. You see the
names and data of people whose names and addresses and signatures are found in
Anne Smith's address book. You see these same names often mentioned in A.A.
literature names of Bill, Dr. Bob, Bill D., Archie T., Bob E., Earl T., Clarence
S., Bill Van H., the two Stanley brothers, J.D., Wally G., Ernie G., Walter B.,
Hank P., Fitz Mayo, and others listed in Richard K.'s First Forty title. And in
Cleveland records, you can see name and addresses verified by the Cleveland AA
founder, Clarence S.
5. There never were the 100 men and women that Bill mentioned at the time of
writing of the Big Book. There were 40 in 1938, and slightly over 70 when the
Big Book went to print. The Cleveland growth did not begin until May, 1939 after
the Big Book was published.
A.A. Success Rates, A.A. History, Alcoholics Anonymous
History
6. What were the success rates? Success was measured among the pioneers as 50
percent who never drank again, and 25 per cent who drank but returned to
succeed. This group is critical because it is the group as to which specific
names, records, and outcomes were kept. In Cleveland, there was a ninety-three
success rate based on a specific survey conducted by Clarence S. and reported in
A.A. literature.
7. What about today? There are several factors which make accurate calculations
virtually impossible. First, the triennial surveys by AA itself are anything but
accurate, and A.A. says so. This because only groups are surveyed, and many in
one group go to several other groups and meetings each week and are surveyed
more than once. Most are simply never the subject of a survey and certainly not
a survey conducted by statistical standards. A.A. service workers and surveys do
confirm that one-third of those who come into A.A. are out of the door in ninety
days; and fifty percent are out of the door in a year. Second, there are no
rosters in almost any group or meeting in A.A. Third, the Tradition of anonymity
makes an accounting much more difficult than when early AAs knew each other, all
belonged to one group (in Akron), kept rosters with names and addresses and
sobriety data, and used full names in their references. Finally, today s AA is
supposedly a pure alcoholic one who is in A.A. for an alcohol problem, not a
drug problem. But I personally don t think one in five hundred meet that test.
Both young and old today those who come to AA have tried and often become
addicted to every kind of drug imaginable: alcohol, prescription drugs, cocaine,
LSD, the sex-enhancers, marijuana, heroin, after-shave, and a dozen other
concoctions. These are the facts also among the men I have sponsored and also
have met in thousands of meetings.
8. Professionals have conducted surveys among veterans, patients, and selected
groups of AAs. The accuracy is not the subject of my knowledge. But the facts
about present-day A.A. are these in their studies: (a) A definite 75% fail to
maintain sobriety. (b) Probably no more than one to five percent maintain
permanent sobriety. (c) As often as not, those who aligned with AA have a lower
success rate than those who got sober without AA. (d) To date there has been no
adequate survey of success or failure among those AAs who like the pioneers were
born again Christians, reliant upon the Creator for help, and joined together in
some Christian church or Bible fellowship, or prayer group.
9. Within A.A. itself, among those of us who are in the trenches, going to
meetings, helping newcomers, sponsoring people, and fellowshipping with AAs in
outings, dances, retreats, movies, and the like, there is no mystery about
success or failure. If you are active in A.A., you go to conferences and
meetings where sobriety count-downs are conducted No matter how large or small
the number of people attending, the count-downs invariably produce the same
results: A large number will identify themselves as having 30 days or less; a
fairly large number, 90 days or less; a fairly limited number with one year of
sobriety; and then the staggering diminution in the number of people who have 5,
10, 15, 20 years with only a rare member claiming 25 or more years. Yes.
Old-timers exist. But you won t find them in A.A. meetings not today.
10. There is a caveat about success rates. I took great heart in the portion of
the Big Book that is read at most meetings: Rarely have we seen a person fail
who has thoroughly followed our path. Even when I couldn't identify the path, I
believed and counted on the veracity of the statement. For me, it is true. I
thoroughly followed every step of the A.A. path. Furthermore, I put my trust in
Almighty God; sought Him through His son, just as early AAs did; continued to
grow in my understanding and fellowship with God and other believers through
Bible study, prayer, fellowship, and witness. And I have not had a drinking or
drug problem since two days before I entered A.A. in the Spring of 1986. Nor
have a small handful of the men I have sponsored and who followed the same
route.
11. AAs can and should be the first to acknowledge that they have no monopoly on
God; that just about any person alive can quit drinking if he or she wants to;
that A.A. today has no special record of success that cannot be found in many
other groups and therapies; and that as with so many other organizations and
disciplines you probably get out of A.A. exactly what you put into it. If you
throw yourself wholeheartedly into a life without the necessity for drinking,
remember what excessive drinking does to you, and count on God for help in
resisting temptation, you can be and have the same success as member of the A.A.
Society that the early A.A. was when he thoroughly followed their path.
A.A. Success Rates, A.A. History, Alcoholics Anonymous
History
A.A. Success Rates, A.A. History, Alcoholics Anonymous
History
A.A.
History is a privately owned and operated website and has no affiliation with
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Step program.
A.A. Success Rates, A.A. History, Alcoholics Anonymous
History
©2005 A.A. History

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