Yes, Twelve Step Facilitation is An Evidence Based Treatment.

The latest buzzword in the addiction treatment world over the past few years is “Evidence Based Treatment” (or EBT).  Generally, an EBT is a method of treatment for which there is evidence proving its effectiveness.  I think most people would be shocked to find out what’s really being passed off as “treatment” for addiction, and the fact that that most practitioners really don’t care whether there is evidence of its effectiveness or not.  Nevertheless, that is the state of things, as respected addiction researcher William Miller noted in 2005:

Although we do expect primary care and specialist physicians to keep current in their field and to provide us the most current and effective treatment that science has to offer, the same standard has not been applied in behavioral health care. In treating substance use disorders, practice has been largely guided by whatever approach a provider was trained in or preferred. Because providers are inclined to believe that their services are effective, and because payment for services has not been linked to the content of treatment, incentives to change and update one’s practice have been minimal. Third-party payers have reimbursed for generic contexts of mental health and substance abuse treatments, such as evaluation, group therapy, inpatient treatment, and case management. What goes on behind closed doors has been left to professional judgment, and practitioners have preferred it that way.

Standards of care are changing, however, with the recognition that not all treatment works (White, 2005). States and cities are beginning to mandate that behavioral health care providers observe the same evidence-based treatment (EBT) standards that are expected in health care more generally. Reimbursement is gradually being tied to the delivery of EBTs and even to the outcomes of treatment. The handwriting is on the wall: Those who are not providing empirically supported interventions are going to have a harder time getting paid for their services. Anything goes is gone. [1]

Doesn’t that sum it all up?  What a novel idea – if you want to get paid, then you should deliver an effective product.

As addiction has become medicalized over the last century, rates of addiction have only risen; more people have become “chronic relapsers” as they’ve been taught by the recovery culture that they’ve got an incurable disease; more people are stuck in the revolving door rehab system; and its become painfully obvious to too many people that treatment just doesn’t work.  So, the regulators have clamped down and said that if you wanna get reimbursed by the state for providing treatment, then you better be doing something that works.  This covers the ass of the regulators, and restores faith in treatment for the naive public – but it hasn’t really improved treatment.

But you ask, how could it not improve treatment?  If they have to use methods proven to work, then it must improve treatment.  Not really.

The recovery culture has simply kept business as usual, and responded to the call for EBTs by declaring their ineffective treatments to be effective, with the use of specious “evidence.”  Case in point: Twelve Step Facilitation (TSF).

TSF is a more formalized version of the teachings of Twelve Step programs (which have never really been shown to be effective themselves), delivered by therapists.  Here’s the official summary of TSF from SAMHSA’s National Registry of Evidence Based Programs and Practices (NREPP):

Twelve Step Facilitation Therapy (TSF) is a brief, structured, and manual-driven approach to facilitating early recovery from alcohol abuse, alcoholism, and other drug abuse and addiction problems. TSF is implemented with individual clients over 12 to 15 sessions. The intervention is based on the behavioral, spiritual, and cognitive principles of 12-step fellowships such as Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and Narcotics Anonymous (NA). These principles include acknowledging that willpower alone cannot achieve sustained sobriety, that surrender to the group conscience must replace self-centeredness, and that long-term recovery consists of a process of spiritual renewal. Therapy focuses on two general goals: (1) acceptance of the need for abstinence from alcohol and other drug use and (2) surrender, or the willingness to participate actively in 12-step fellowships as a means of sustaining sobriety. The TSF counselor assesses the client’s alcohol or drug use, advocates abstinence, explains the basic 12-step concepts, and actively supports and facilitates initial involvement and ongoing participation in AA. The counselor also discusses specific readings from the AA/NA literature with the client, aids the client in using AA/NA resources in crisis times, and presents more advanced concepts such as moral inventories.[2]

Indeed, Twelve Step Facilitation is listed as an evidence based treatment by SAMHSA, and they cite research from the infamous Project MATCH as the ‘evidence’ for the method’s effectiveness.  An honest review of this research would never lead a sane person to call TSF an ‘evidence based treatment.’

Project MATCH was the US government’s most expensive study of addiction to date, coming in at a cost of $35,000,000.  Yet with all those millions of dollars, the researchers still failed to include one extremely important feature of good studies – a control group!  The most reliable method science has for determining whether a treatment works is by comparing it to the absence of treatment.  This is the norm for drug testing – give half of your study subjects the real drug, and give the other half of them an inactive placebo or sugar pill.  Then, effectiveness is measured by counting just how many people in the treatment group did better than those in the placebo (or control) group.

The logic behind the use of control groups is simple, if significantly more people get well with the treatment than those without it, then the treatment is probably effective.  If an equal number of people get well both with and without the treatment, then it’s ineffective.  And finally, if more people get well without the treatment than with it – then the treatment is actually counterproductive.  None of this can be ascertained without a control group of untreated subjects, or at the very least, by comparing the treated group’s effectiveness to previously established rates of self-change in similar untreated individuals.

This is the study on which SAMHSA has declared TSF to be an ‘Evidence Based Treatment’?  The fact is, people change their substance use habits without treatment ALL THE TIME.  A vast majority of people do it without treatment – so some comparison to untreated individuals is absolutely warranted.  We have no way of knowing whether those who were successful in Project MATCH should attribute their success to the treatment or not – we don’t know that they wouldn’t have simply gotten better on their own without formal help.  Yet, because some people happened to get better while undergoing TSF, we assume that it’s effective?  This is not only intellectually dishonest (by omission for sure), but also lends much undeserved credibility to TSF and those programs who employ it (at least 78% of treatment programs).

Guess what – there was a hidden (or accidental) control group of sorts in Project MATCH.  The data was uncovered in 2005, a full 7 years after the publication of the MATCH research reports used to support TSF.  Two researchers with access to the MATCH data found that the other researchers had ignored a large group of study subjects who had signed up for the study and treatment, went through intake, and then failed to attend even a single counseling session.  These subjects were even followed up with, and interviewed to gauge levels of substance use.  As if the failure to include a control group, as well as other problems with the design of MATCH weren’t enough, the analysis of the accidental control group deals a death blow to the conclusion that ‘TSF works.’

The researchers analyzed the data comparing those who attended all 12 treatment sessions in MATCH to these who only attended 1 session, and those who attended 0 sessions.  Whether they looked at percentage of days abstinent or drinks per drinking day, they found over and over again at each data point, nearly identical rates of improvement in each group.  They also found that in every group, the majority of the decrease in drinking happened in the very first week of the study, before exposure to any treatment, and essentially flatlined after that.  Here are some of their comments:

The results suggest that treatment was not particularly effective. The following lines of evidence point to this conclusion. Correlations between treatment attendance and outcome were very small (as shown in Table 2). A median 3% of the variance in outcome might be attributed to treatment.

The correlations existed before most treatment occurred, at week 1 (Table 3). We would normally infer from the correlations in Table 2 that more treatment produces better drinking outcomes, but the Table 3 correlations suggests the reverse, that better drinking levels predict more treatment.

Over 60 publications have been generated by Project MATCH, but, to the best of our knowledge, all have overlooked the main finding of this study, i.e., the good outcomes of the zero treatment group when compared to the full treatment group and that the improvement in all groups occurred immediately after enrollment in the trial. Ineffective treatment would be the most parsimonious explanation for the rather surprising main findings of Project MATCH, that there was no match between patient characteristics and different types of treatment, and that all three treatments were equal.[3]

This chart of some of that data may make the point clearer:

Screen Shot 2016-05-12 at 7.17.08 PM

Although the team who reviewed the ‘evidence’ for TSF’s effectiveness did mention that there was no control group, they still managed to give TSF an average score of 3.5 out of 4 in six different dimensions, and classified it as an EBT.  The analysis I quoted above was conspicuously absent from their review.[2]

Another thing – let’s not forget William Miller’s review of the most well known treatment methods. He analyzed the evidence available to support these methods, and ranked them accordingly. Out of 48 methods, Twelve Step Facilitation ranked at #38 – with a negative cumulative evidence score! You can see the results of that analysis at this link.

Let’s also not forgot the results of this study done in the 70’s: Alcoholics Anonymous may lead to increased binge drinking– where it was found in follow-up that alcoholic men assigned to a year of 12 step based treatment became 5 times more likely to binge drink than alcoholic men assigned to receive no treatment whatsoever.

Based on the evidence presented, we do not know that TSF works.  And based on some of the evidence known, 12-step based methods of treatment may actually have a negative effect, actually increasing the problems experienced. If TSF can pass as an EBT with such a dearth of evidence of positive outcomes – when it is known that untreated individuals fare just as well if not better – then the title of Evidence Based Treatment is a complete and total joke.  The popularity of EBT’s is nothing more than a marketing tool for rehabs to keep providing more of the same ineffective treatment and avoiding any progress – and a way for regulators to appear like they’re doing their jobs.

[1] Evidence Based Treatment: Why, What, Where, When, and How?  Miller et al, 2005, Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment.

[2] Twelve Step Facilitation Therapy.  SAMHSA’s National Registry of Evidence-Based Programs and Practices, accessed Feb 28 20012.

[NOTE: That link was broken. Here is the currently active link: http://nrepp.samhsa.gov/ViewIntervention.aspx?id=358 – Steven, 10/17/2015]

[3] Are Alcoholism Treatments Effective? The Project MATCH Data.  Robert B Cutler and David A Fishbain, BMC Public Health, 2005.

 

By Steven Slate

Steven Slate has personally taught hundreds of people how to change their substance use habits through choice - while avoiding the harmful recovery culture and disease model of addiction.

7 comments

  1. For a rounded view, worth a careful read of the rebuttal to the Cutler paper by Bill Miller: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/5/76

    I’m not a 12 step kind of guy, but in fairness to TSF, there is an evidence base outwith Project Match. How strong that evidence is will be open to debate, but there is more there than this one study. I enjoyed your article, but it would be a stronger contribution if you were to review the evidence more broadly.

    Am enjoying your site, however..

    1. There is no magical silver bullet in the fight against addiction, however, as a recovering addict myself, the 12 steps have played a remarkable role in my recovery. The steps gradually teach a person how to live a good life, to free yourself of guilt and anxiety, learn to understand your emotions, and deal with them effectively. The last step promotes ‘giving back’, that is, use what you have learned to teach others. Having gone from zero to ‘hero’ makes me responsible for my own actions, in order to serve as a role model for others… If you work the program, it works for you…

      1. Steppers are all robots! Just because everyone tells the same lie does not make it true. The efficacy of tsf is no better than nothing at all. The real problem is that the 12 steps are religion camouflaged as medicine. This is a deep faith-healing sect of fundamental Christianity. This ‘program’ is syndical, dishonest, deceptive religious indoctrination. These steps are the only religion that hides it’s religious nature to lure people in while converting them. Due to this hiding, they have duped the us court system and psychiatric professions into illegally mandating people into the fold. This ‘program’ is a threat to freedom and fortune – and an outright danger to religious freedom. A travesty and a crime.

        1. Well I’m sure counselorchick isn’t biased after a tirade like that. Wow.

          Certainly the efficacy of TSP isn’t certain. I think a control group study with TSP probably would have been unethical as the presumption was that there is a benefit to the program. Obviously you can’t double blind the study like you can pharmceuticals, and you can’t really sham it like you can accupuncture, so there will never be a properly controlled study.

          But that is par for the course for all of medicine. Are there any physicians, counselors or pharmacists that want fewer government dollars?

          1. No more unethical to have a control group than any other modality. Do you think aids anti retro viral cocktails were studied without a control group?

  2. The 12 steps are a non-professional tool that professionals can education about and refer to but the real work is done after treatment is over and over an extended period of time. It is done because an individual really wants it, and it’s done with a solid and experienced non-professional sponsor. There is really no accurate way to gauge the success rate in my opinion because the measuring tools used to determine the success rate are not set up to assess 12 step properly.

    I get it that a lot of people who are briefly educated on 12 step recovery while in treatment and then go to a few meetings afterward, are not successful. That really is the point as far as I’m concerned. 12 step recovery is not about doing a homework packet in treatment, taking a few classes, going to a few meetings and talking to some people here and there. It is a indepth approach to changing ones perspective on themselves, of the world, and thus changing their reaction to life. Those who actually do the work are often times very successful.

    I have worked with approx 1300 alcoholics/addicts. I would say that of those 1300, I know of approx 150 who have truly followed up with what was suggested in treatment. Of those 150, I know of approx 130 who have completely turned there lives around, They remain clean and sober and are good citizens, good parents, good significant others, good people.

    I can also tell you that I routinely run into people or randomly get a phone call from someone who I did not know how they did after treatment and I am pleasantly suprised to find out that they too are successful; the point being that I do not truly know how many in addition to the 150 and the 130 have actually followed through and succeeded. The numbers are likely much higher.

    For instance: I received a facebook friend request the other day from a woman who I had in treatment approx 6 years ago. I accepted the request and she sent a picture to me. The picture was of her, another 2 women who I’d had in treatment the same time as her, 2 other women who I had in treatment approx a year after her, and all of their sponsees (3 of the 12 sponsees are women who I’d had in treatment also). That’s a total of 8 women I’d had in treatment who are successful in AA/NA who I had not known about and then 9 additional women who were helped as a result.

    I am aware that it does not work for everyone and that there are other ways to treat addiction/alcoholism but I feel that there is pretty strong evidence that AA/NA works.

    1. There’s nothing wrong with using 12-step to deal with drug problems in one’s life. Really, all artifice and government bullshit aside, it’s a church for “low-bottom” drug users. And church is an OK personal option that works if you work it…I’ve met a few people who leaned on their religion to help them through these kind of times in their life, and they did well. I could never disparage their efforts.

      The problem here is that church is NOT SCIENCE. If it works, it doesn’t work because of an objective effect…it works because it makes sense to that person, for subjective reasons. And if you call it science when it is NOT SCIENCE, then you are in the position of forcing your religion onto another person for what you think is an objectively true reason, which is a GROSS BREACH OF ETHICS, as well as NOT REAL SCIENCE. It’s also DELUSIONAL to conflate your subjective recovery under your religion (which is real recovery) with an objective, scientifically reproducible effect…again, because religion is NOT SCIENCE. This is, of course, leaving entirely out of the equation all of the profitable reasons for the rehab industry to pimp religion as science. It may be profitable but it is NOT SCIENCE. Not only that, treating it as science actually obfuscates the work that real scientists are trying to do…so your mistaken labeling of religion as science is ACTUALLY HURTING THE EFFORTS OF REAL SCIENTISTS.

      PLEASE KEEP YOUR CHURCH OUT OF SCIENCE, FOR THE SAKE OF THE TRUTH AND EVERYTHING HOLY, is I suppose the best way to sum this up. Thank you.

Comments are closed.