AA Failed 38-Year-Old Jillian, Exposing Gaps in Alcohol Treatment
Updated
Updated · STAT · May 14
AA Failed 38-Year-Old Jillian, Exposing Gaps in Alcohol Treatment
1 articles · Updated · STAT · May 14
At 38, Jillian turned to Alcoholics Anonymous after alcohol cost her a marriage and threatened her career, but she found the meetings ineffective and at times unsafe.
AA’s God-centered approach and insistence on sudden, permanent abstinence clashed with her needs, while men at meetings aggressively sought rides and phone numbers under the guise of mentorship.
Her earlier support also fell short: a therapist’s harm-reduction strategies only partly helped, relapses continued, and her family doctor encouraged cutting back but never prescribed medication.
Jillian’s experience underscores a broader treatment gap for alcohol use disorder, where familiar options can miss patients needing evidence-based care, medication and safer support settings.
When a trusted recovery group isn't safe, where can vulnerable women find help?
Why are life-saving addiction medications available but almost never prescribed by doctors?
Her doctors missed one critical step. Could this common treatment oversight prove fatal?