THE VARIETIES OF RECOVERY EXPERIENCE: A PRIMER FOR ADDICTION TREATMENT PROFESSIONALS AND RECOVERY ADVOCATES

WILLIAM WHITE
ERNEST KURTZ


DOI: 10.2190/911R-MTQ5-VJ1H-75CU

Abstract

The study of alcohol and other drugs (AOD) is historically marked by 3 stages: 1) the investigation of AOD-related social and personal pathologies; 2) the development of personal and social interventions aimed at resolving AOD problems; and 3) a focus on the prevalence and patterns of long-term recovery from AOD problems. This article honors this transition from addiction and treatment paradigms to a recovery paradigm by exploring the growing varieties of pathways and styles through which people are resolving serious and persistent AOD-related problems. A review of scientific and mutual aid literature is used to catalog variations in: scope of recovery (primary and secondary chemical health and global health); depth of recovery (partial, full and enriched); types of recovery (abstinence-based, moderation-based, medication-assisted); context of recovery initiation (solo, peer-assisted, treatment-assisted); frameworks of recovery initiation (religious, spiritual, secular); temporal styles of recovery initiation (transformative change, incremental change, drift); recovery identity (positive, neutral, negative); recovery relationships (acultural, bicultural and enmeshed styles; virtual recovery); recovery stability/durability (At what point does present remission predict future remission?); and recovery termination (Is recovery ever completed?). After exploring the wide diversity of recovery styles and experiences that exist within Twelve Step fellowships and other recovery mutual aid societies, the article explores the implications of the diversity in recovery experiences for the design and conduct of addiction treatment.

Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.