Heartened by her discovery and angry that she had suffered A.A.'s rigid discipline for so long, Kishline decided to create a support group and treatment approach of her own. A little research quickly revealed that controlled drinking, as opposed to total abstinence, is an acceptable therapy in many parts of the world. Her own program, Moderation Management, begins with a month of abstinence. After that, members are given drinking guidelines: for men, no more than four drinks on any given day and a maximum of 14 drinks a week. Women, whose smaller size means they metabolize alcohol differently, are advised to stop at three drinks a day and consume no more than nine in a week. Neither sex should drink every day.
Although Moderation Management claims just 400 adherents at present, Kishline, who recently published a book on the subject, is already something of a pariah in recovery circles. Antialcohol groups have issued press releases condemning her approach, and individual members of A.A. have blasted her thinking as just another form of denial. It is almost as if she had called for the abolition of A.A. itself. In fact, Kishline has merely helped bring into the open one of the most contentious and enduring debates in addiction research: whether most people who repeatedly abuse alcohol suffer from a disease over which they have no control, or whether they are engaging in a freely chosen, if unhealthy, pattern of behavior.
On the one hand, many scientists take issue with A.A. dogma. Says physician Stanton Peele, an addiction expert: ''Every major tenet of the disease view of addiction is refuted both by scientific research and by everyday observation.'' Treatment programs in Canada, Britain, Germany and Australia have long distinguished between problem drinkers, who consume too much alcohol but can cut back if they get help, and hard-core alcoholics, whose only hope is a lifetime of sobriety. Even the most avid proponents of abstinence admit that some former alcoholics have successfully navigated the road to moderate drinking.
On the other hand, the two camps disagree profoundly on whether it is a small or large number of people who can make the switch. In Kishline's view, there are four times as many problem drinkers as hard-core alcoholics. "Moderation Management becomes a weeding-out point for chronic drinkers," she maintains. "If they can't handle our limits, then it's obvious that they have a more serious problem, and we refer them to an abstinence-based program." But her critics argue that less than 10 percent of people who abuse alcohol, and perhaps as little as 1 percent, can maintain moderate-drinking habits the rest of their life. ''Nobody in the trenches is impressed with [controlled drinking]," says George Vaillant, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School who is an expert on A.A. "Every time someone makes a good case, just wait 10 years, and you'll see they're wrong."
As anyone whose life has been affected by problem drinking knows, the stakes in the debate are high. And the success or failure of a moderation approach can only be measured over many years, one drink at a time.
By Christine Gorman. Reported by Lisa McLaughlin/New York and Sam Allis/Boston
Copyright 1995 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
NCADD News Release
For More Information, Contact:
Jeffrey Hon, Director for Public Information
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For Immediate Release:
Statement re:
Vehicular Manslaughter Charges Against Author of Moderation Management
Attribute to:
Stacia Murphy, President
It was with great sadness that the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Inc. (NCADD) today learned that Audrey Kishline, author of Moderation Management and founder of a movement with the same name, has been charged by the state of Washington with two counts of vehicular manslaughter. According to the Seattle Times, Ms. Kishline had a blood alcohol content of 0.26--more than three times the legal limit--when the pick up truck she was driving in the wrong direction on an interstate highway crashed into a second vehicle, killing a man and his daughter on March 25. NCADD offers its belated condolences to the family of Richard and LaSchell Davis.
The Seattle Times also has reported that Ms. Kishline's trial, scheduled to have begun today, has been postponed pending completion of intensive treatment for alcoholism. Her lawyer has been quoted as saying that Ms. Kishline realizes that "moderation management is nothing but alcoholics covering up their problem."
This dreadful tragedy might have been avoided if Ms. Kishline had come to this realization earlier. Unfortunately, the disease of alcoholism, which is characterized by denial, prevented this from occurring. While this does not excuse Ms. Kishline's actions, it provides a harsh lesson for all of society, particularly those individuals who collude with the media to continually question abstinence-based treatment for problems related to alcohol and other drugs.
What makes Ms. Kishline's present situation even more distressing is the fact that her denial, amplified by the media, undoubtedly contributed to the progression of alcoholism and other alcohol-related problems for thousands more unidentified Americans and their families. In March 1995, representatives of this organization debated Ms. Kishline several times on national television and in newspapers all over the country. How many of these television programs and newspapers will give as much prominence to the consequences of "moderation management" five years later? As is often repeated in training courses for alcoholism counselors, "if it's a problem in March, it's going to be a disaster by December."
The National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence hopes Ms. Kishline will finally achieve sobriety and recognize how high a price denial of her illness has exacted. But more significantly, we should all remember the names of Richard and LaSchell Davis the next time a problem drinker claims to be able to "drink a little" without harm. As a society we must finally accept that abstinence offers the safest and most predictable course for the treatment of alcohol and other drug-related problems and we must do everything we can to break through the denial of those who are actively addicted.
6/20/00
National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Inc.