Center for Addiction Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, 02114, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2011 Mar;35(3):454-63. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2010.01362.x. Epub 2010 Dec 16.
Evidence indicates Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) can play a valuable role in recovery from alcohol use disorder. While AA itself purports it aids recovery through "spiritual" practices and beliefs, this claim remains contentious and has been only rarely formally investigated. Using a lagged, mediational analysis, with a large, clinical sample of adults with alcohol use disorder, this study examined the relationships among AA, spirituality/religiousness, and alcohol use, and tested whether the observed relation between AA and better alcohol outcomes can be explained by spiritual changes.
Adults (N = 1,726) participating in a randomized controlled trial of psychosocial treatments for alcohol use disorder (Project MATCH) were assessed at treatment intake, and 3, 6, 9, 12, and 15 months on their AA attendance, spiritual/religious practices, and alcohol use outcomes using validated measures. General linear modeling (GLM) and controlled lagged mediational analyses were utilized to test for mediational effects.
Controlling for a variety of confounding variables, attending AA was associated with increases in spiritual practices, especially for those initially low on this measure at treatment intake. Results revealed AA was also consistently associated with better subsequent alcohol outcomes, which was partially mediated by increases in spirituality. This mediational effect was demonstrated across both outpatient and aftercare samples and both alcohol outcomes (proportion of abstinent days; drinks per drinking day).
Findings suggest that AA leads to better alcohol use outcomes, in part, by enhancing individuals' spiritual practices and provides support for AA's own emphasis on increasing spiritual practices to facilitate recovery from alcohol use disorder.
有证据表明,匿名戒酒会(AA)在戒酒康复过程中可以发挥宝贵作用。虽然 AA 本身声称通过“精神”实践和信仰来帮助康复,但这一说法仍然存在争议,并且很少有正式的研究。本研究使用滞后中介分析,对大量患有酒精使用障碍的成年临床样本进行分析,研究了 AA、灵性/宗教信仰与酒精使用之间的关系,并检验了 AA 与更好的酒精康复结果之间的观察关系是否可以用精神变化来解释。
参加酒精使用障碍心理社会治疗随机对照试验(Project MATCH)的成年人(N=1726)在治疗开始时以及治疗后 3、6、9、12 和 15 个月时,使用经过验证的测量工具评估他们的 AA 出席情况、精神/宗教实践和酒精使用结果。采用广义线性模型(GLM)和控制滞后中介分析来检验中介效应。
在控制了各种混杂变量后,参加 AA 与精神实践的增加有关,尤其是对那些在治疗开始时该测量值较低的人。结果表明,AA 与随后更好的酒精康复结果也始终相关,而这种相关性部分是通过增加精神实践来介导的。这种中介效应在门诊和康复后样本以及两种酒精康复结果(戒酒天数比例;饮酒天数的饮酒量)中都得到了证明。
研究结果表明,AA 通过增强个人的精神实践,从而导致更好的酒精使用康复结果,这为 AA 自身强调增加精神实践以促进酒精使用障碍康复提供了支持。