Nickname | AA |
---|---|
Formation | 1935 |
Founders | Bill Wilson Bob Smith |
Founded at | Akron, Ohio |
Type | Mutual aid addiction recovery twelve-step program |
Headquarters | New York, New York |
Membership (2020) | 2,100,000 |
Website | aa |
Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) is a global peer-led mutual aid fellowship begun in the United States dedicated to abstinence-based recovery from alcoholism through its spiritually inclined twelve-step program.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7] Besides stressing anonymity, AA's twelve traditions establish it as free to all, non-professional, unaffiliated and non-denominational, as well as apolitical with a public relations policy of attraction rather than promotion.[2][3][8] In 2020 AA estimated a worldwide membership of over two million, with 75% of those in the US and Canada.[9][10]
AA dates its founding to Bill Wilson's (Bill W.) and Bob Smith's (Dr. Bob) first commiseration alcoholic-to-alcoholic in 1935. Meeting through AA's immediate precursor the Christian revivalist Oxford Group, they and other alcoholics helped each other until forming what became AA. While at first only white and male, though this was neither intentional or long lasting, in 1939 they published Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How More than One Hundred Men Have Recovered from Alcoholism. Known as "the Big Book", it is the origin of AA's name.[11][12][13]
The Big Book debuted AA's suggested—but not required—twelve steps as a continuing sobriety program of prayer, reflection, admission, better conduct and atonement, all to produce a "spiritual awakening" followed by taking others—usually sponsees—through the steps. Integral to the steps is divining and following the will of an undefined God—"as we understood Him" or a "higher power”, but differing practices and beliefs, or any lack of, as is the case with atheists, are accommodated.[8]
To keep sobriety as its primary purpose, and to remain what Wilson called a "benign anarchy", AA instituted its twelve traditions in 1950 to ensure membership to all wishing to stop drinking with no dues or fees required. Members are advised not to use AA for material gain or to increase public prestige. All memberships are to be kept anonymous, especially in public media, but for broken anonymity, no consequences are prescribed. The traditions have AA steering clear of hierarchies, dogma, public controversies, while other outside entanglements or acquisition of property are to be avoided. To stay independent and self-supporting, the traditions would have AA groups accepting outside contributions from no one.[14][15]
A 2020 scientific review found regardless of demographics that clinical treatments which increased AA participation via AA twelve step facilitation (AA/TSF) had sustained remission rates 20-60% above well-established treatments. Additionally, 4 of the 5 economic studies in the review found that AA/TSF lowered healthcare costs considerably.[a][17][18][19] Regarding the disease model of alcoholism, despite scattered allusions in AA literature an otherwise receptive AA has not endorsed it. Its association with AA, as well as a good deal of its broader acceptance, stems from many members propagating it.[20]
With AA's permission other recovery fellowships such as Narcotics Anonymous and Al-Anon have adopted and adapted the twelve steps and traditions.[21]
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