Recovery from alcohol problems in the absence of treatment: a qualitative narrative analysis

Richard Mellor, Kari Lancaster, Alison Ritter

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Citations (SciVal)

Abstract

Background and aims
Recovery from alcohol problems in the absence of treatment or mutual-aid is very common, but under-researched. This study explores the lives of people who had resolved their alcohol problems without treatment, seeking to situate experiences of recovery in social contexts and broader life narratives.

Design
The in-depth qualitative interviews were aided by a life-history methodology that invited participants to account retrospectively for their lives. A narrative analysis was undertaken.

Setting
Two major cities (Sydney and Melbourne) in Australia.

Participants
People who had resolved an alcohol problem in the absence of treatment (n = 12) were recruited from the general community using convenience sampling.

Measurements
Eligible participants had received ‘minimal treatment’ for an alcohol use disorder: fewer than three sessions in an outpatient treatment programme or nine sessions with mutual-aid groups (e.g. Alcoholics Anonymous), or having accessed mental health treatment for problems other than drinking at least 2 years prior or 1 year after having resolved an alcohol problem. Participants were considered to have had an alcohol use disorder if they reported two or more symptoms (DSM-V) within a 1-year period prior to the past year, using questions endorsed by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA). People were considered to have resolved their alcohol use disorder by responding to the recruitment message calling for people who "used to have an alcohol problem but no longer do". The Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT-C) was used to understand participant’s drinking behaviours in the past 12 months.

Findings
Four different narratives were identified in the analysis. In the emancipation narrative, identity development and major changes across the life-curve were associated with separating oneself from an oppressive circumstance. In discovery narratives, art culture and other consciousness-expanding experiences were sources of identity development, but sometimes a barrier to alcohol recovery. In mastery narratives, life events were understood as failures or successes, and recovery was positioned as an individual journey accomplished through increased problem awareness. Finally, in coping narratives, changes were understood as a series of continuous struggles, and recovery was made sense of through diagnostic discourses.

Conclusions
People who resolve an alcohol use disorder in the absence of treatment or mutual-aid appear to explain their recovery in terms of at least four different life narratives: emancipation, discovery, mastery or coping. Social contexts and cultures outside the treatment setting, and the various identities and narratives they provide, shape change processes.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1413-1423
JournalAddiction
Volume116
Issue number6
Early online date10 Oct 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Jun 2021

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