In their 2020 Commentary published in The Journal of Addiction Medicine (a journal of the American Society of Addiction Medicine aka ASAM), Kelly and Bergman state that:
“Individuals with regular and increasing very heavy alcohol consumption cannot be considered as maintaining ‘recovery’ due to toxicity and intoxication-related risks”.
Why did they publish a commentary about recovery and very heavy drinking being incompatible?
The commentary by Kelly and Bergman is their response to an article published earlier in 2020 in the same journal. It’s an article by Witkiewitz and others titled, “Can Individuals With Alcohol Use Disorder Sustain Non-abstinent Recovery? Non-abstinent Outcomes 10 years After Alcohol Use Disorder Treamtent.” In their article Witkiewitz and colleagues state,
“Nonabstinent AUD recovery is possible and is sustainable for up to 10 years after treatment. The current findings align with recent proposals to move beyond relying on alcohol consumption as a central defining feature of AUD recovery.”
Among other points, Kelly and Bergman note:
It looks to me like this is a full-blown open discussion of a recovery definition by academic researchers in the top peer-reviewed literature. I don’t think the discussion is over with, and it should be fascinating.
I could say a lot of things about a recovery definition that ignores the presence of drinking and that even ignores drinking at the level of very heavy drinking. And I could say a lot of things about the Kelly and Bergman response. For now, however, I’ll go a different direction and make some comments of my own that apply to the topic overall:
For those that are interested, I’ll note that the Kelly and Bergman commentary has already produced a formal and published letter to the editor from Witkiewitz and colleagues. All three references are down below.
I might post more on this down the road.
References
Kelly JF, Bergman BG. A Bridge Too Far: Individuals With Regular and Increasing Very Heavy Alcohol Consumption Cannot be Considered as Maintaining “Recovery” Due to Toxicity and Intoxication-related Risks. J Addict Med. 2020 Oct 14. doi: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000000759. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 33060467.
Witkiewitz K, Wilson AD, Roos CR, Swan JE, Votaw VR, Stein ER, Pearson MR, Edwards KA, Tonigan JS, Hallgren KA, Montes KS, Maisto SA, Tucker JA. Can Individuals With Alcohol Use Disorder Sustain Non-abstinent Recovery? Non-abstinent Outcomes 10 Years After Alcohol Use Disorder Treatment. J Addict Med. 2020 Oct 14. doi: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000000760. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 33060466.
Witkiewitz K, Wilson AD, Pearson MR, Roos CR, Swan JE, Votaw VR, Stein ER, Edwards KA, Tonigan JS, Hallgren KA, Montes KS, Maisto SA, Tucker JA. A Bridge to Nowhere: Resistance to the Possibility of Some Heavy Drinking During Recovery and the Potential Public Health Implications. J Addict Med. 2021 Feb 10. doi: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000000796. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 33577228.