For Professionals

"Cooperation with the Professional Community"
If you are a professional looking for information
about Alcoholics Anonymous:
Many thousands of alcoholics
owe their lives to a non-alcoholic professional — a
medical doctor, psychiatrist, counselor, law enforcement
official, member of the clergy — who
was knowledgeable enough about alcoholism
to recognize the illness and take the actions
that would cut through the alcoholic’s
denial and start him on the road to recovery.
Often, non-alcoholics are able to help drunks
long before they might have reached Alcoholics
Anonymous on their own. For example, in the
2001 AA Membership Survey, 27% of those surveyed
identified courts, counseling agencies, and
healthcare providers as the factor “most
responsible for members coming to AA”*
* Adapted from the Spring 2004 issue
of About
AA, A Newsletter for Professionals*.
You might have patients, clients, employees,
students or members of your congregation who have — or
may have — a drinking problem. Perhaps they
or their family members have come to you for guidance.
Even if you’ve heard of Alcoholics Anonymous
(“AA”), you may have questions about “how
it works,” and you want to find out more
information about our Fellowship before you refer
anyone to us. We are happy to help you learn more
about AA.
AA has individuals and service committees
who are available to provide professionals with specific
information about our Fellowship:
What
AA is, What it Does and Doesn’t Do *,
and how people can find us. In Colorado, as in
many other areas, we have established the “Cooperation
with the Professional Community” (CPC) committee
as a resource for providing that kind of information.
Upon request from professionals, the CPC committee
can:
- Send out pamphlets and other informational materials
about Alcoholics Anonymous
- Send out local meeting schedules
- Take professionals to an open AA meeting so they
can see for themselves what it is
- Put professionals in contact with other AA members
who would be available to accompany their patient,
client, etc. to his/her first AA meeting
- Present an overview of the program of Alcoholics
Anonymous to the professional or
his/her staff
If you’d like more information, specific
or general, about any of the items mentioned
above, please feel free to send an e-mail to
the chairperson of the CPC committee at cpc@coloradoaa.org.
There is no charge associated with
any of these services. Our members participate in
these outreach activities because it helps them stay
sober, and we would welcome the opportunity to be
of service.
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* Alcoholics
Anonymous World Services, Inc. has not approved,
endorsed, or reviewed this website, nor is it affiliated
with it, and the ability to link to A.A.W.S.' site
does not imply otherwise.