Members of NAWS presented the following at the American Correctional Association
Conference, August 1999.
Narcotics Anonymous: A Vision of
Hope on the Inside;
Living the Vision on the Outside
Theme: Narcotics Anonymous: A
self-help resource in the correctional setting and a way of
sustaining recovery upon release into the community - Presented at
American Correctional Association Conference, August 1999
Introduction
Thank you for your interest in the Narcotics Anonymous program and
its volunteer efforts. Our presentation will share information
regarding NA. volunteers in the correctional system. Their function
is to introduce inmates, who are substance abusers, to recovery in
Narcotics Anonymous. Additionally, we will highlight the importance
of community-based recovery programs that assist felons with living
drug-free upon their release. Emphasis is placed on providing an
alternative to substance abusers that may help reduce their
recidivism.
What is Narcotics Anonymous
Narcotics Anonymous is a nonprofit fellowship. Our membership is
free. We offer a program of recovery to anyone who has a desire to
stop using drugs. By following the program of recovery offered in
Narcotics Anonymous, our members have found a way to live drug-free
as responsible and productive citizens of society. The program of NA
consists of guiding principles, as outlined in our literature, It
Works How and Why and the Twelve Concepts for NA Service. Outlined
in It Works How and Why are the Twelve Steps that are for individual
members to use as a personal program of recovery and the Twelve
Traditions that are principles for the groups. The Twelve Concepts
serve as guiding principles for our organizational structure.
Narcotics Anonymous is not affiliated with other organizations,
including other Twelve Step programs, treatment centers or
correctional facilities. As an organization, we do not employ
professional counselors or therapists. Narcotics Anonymous has no
residential facilities or clinics and does not provide vocational,
legal, financial, psychiatric or medical services.
We recognize that NA is but one organization among many addressing
the problem of drug addiction/drug dependency. Our members have
significant success in addressing their own addiction, but Narcotics
Anonymous does not claim to have a program that will work for all
addicts under all circumstances or that its therapeutic views should
be universally adopted. In order to maintain its focus on a program
of recovery, NA does not express or endorse anything outside its own
specific sphere of activity. NA does not express opinions, pro or
con, on religion and civil, social, medical, or legal issues such as
criminality, law enforcement, drug legalization, prostitution, HIV
and free needle programs. We keep our focus to what we believe is
our realm of expertise-that of one recovering addict helping
another. If Narcotics Anonymous can be useful to the inmates in your
facility, and we are available in your area, we welcome the
opportunity to be of service.
Narcotics Anonymous Growth
The rapid growth of registered Narcotics Anonymous meetings in
recent years and the rapid spread of NA outside of North America are
prime indicators of the program's success. In 1978, there were fewer
than 200 groups in three countries. By 1983, the Narcotics Anonymous
program of recovery had reached more than a dozen countries with
2,966 registered meetings. In 1998, we knew of groups holding 24,685
weekly meetings in ninety (90) countries.
Primarily due to NA's emphasis on protecting the anonymity of our
members, no comprehensive survey of the Narcotics Anonymous
membership has been completed to date. In 1989, we conducted an
informal poll of our members and had 5,000 respondents. The
information gleaned was of gender and age of our members. Our
members were 64% male and 36% female. The predominant age was
between 30 and 45 (48%) followed by 20 to 30 year olds (37%).
How Narcotics Anonymous Works
Narcotics Anonymous believes that one of the keys to its success is
the therapeutic value of recovering addicts helping each other, and
in particular helping the new member. The most common venue that
affords this assistance is the NA meeting. In meetings, each member
shares personal experience with living life drug-free with others
who are in attendance at meetings. Formats may vary (topic, speaker,
book study) from meeting to meeting but all essentially have one
thing in common, an atmosphere of hope and empathy. Meetings may be
classified as "open" to anyone or "closed" to members and those who
believe they have a drug problem.
A fundamental suggestion is for members to seek a sponsor. A sponsor
is an experienced member who offers informal assistance to a new
member on how to remain drug-free and gives suggestions on how to
work a program of recovery.
The Narcotics Anonymous program of recovery uses a simple,
experience-oriented 'disease concept' of addiction. Narcotics
Anonymous does not qualify its use of the term 'disease' in any
medical or specialized therapeutic sense, nor does NA make any
attempt to persuade others of the correctness of its views. Rather,
the NA fellowship asserts that its members have found acceptance of
addiction as a disease to be effective in helping them in their
recovery.
NA Volunteers - What Services Do They Provide?
NA volunteers provide services based upon the type of request and
the number of available volunteers. On many occasions the request is
for information about NA and how to obtain NA literature. However,
the most common request is for volunteers to make a presentation to
a facility's administrative staff and/or residents or inmates. Our
volunteers' primary purpose is to advance awareness of the NA
program to anyone seeking recovery from drug addiction.
We provide support to those inmates who think they have a drug
problem or a history of chemical dependency. The volunteers from the
NA program share their personal experiences about utilizing the NA
program to live a drug-free life. This exposure to the NA program
and NA members can have an appreciable effect in reducing recidivism
by reassuring the incarcerated individual that upon release there
will be support in helping to continue their recovery. Our
experience as a fellowship has shown that this identification and
association are vital. Narcotics Anonymous provides an opportunity
to each individual to improve the quality of his/her life, both
inside the facility and after release from the facility.
Hospitals and Institutions (H&I) Meetings
H&l meetings/presentations, except for those in longer-term
facilities, are intended to simply introduce some of the basic
principles of the NA program to inmates who have a history of
substance abuse and who do not have full access to regular Narcotics
Anonymous meetings in the outside community. In many cases, the NA
H&I meeting complements the facility's substance abuse program by
providing contact with other recovering addicts and an atmosphere to
share experience, strength, and hope with living life drug-free.
Sometimes correctional administrators and/or substance abuse program
staff will contact NA through a local NA helpline/phoneline number
and request to have an H&l meeting/presentation in their
institution. Once we are contacted, a representative usually calls
back to set up an appointment. If we are unable to support a
meeting/presentation at that time, we explain that at the
appointment and that we will nevertheless, maintain communication.
We may also provide NA literature, our product catalog, and inform
them about some of our publications, one of which - The
Institutional Group Guide - is specifically designed for starting
and sustaining meetings in an institutional setting. At other times
the local H&l subcommittee will approach a facility to propose a
meeting/presentation but this will occur only if they are prepared
to provide the members to support such a meeting.
How Narcotics Anonymous H&I Meetings are Conducted
NA H&l meetings in correctional facilities will vary in format from
one facility to another. Facilities will have different policies
that we must take into consideration when planning a format or
bringing NA volunteers to the H&l meeting. Our goal is to provide an
atmosphere where the NA message of recovery is carried and shared.
We have experience carrying the message of recovery in both short
and long-term facilities. We use the phrase "short-term" to refer to
facilities in which inmates are held for less than one year, and
includes some city and county jails, work farms, honor farms, and
privately owned prisons. Because these inmates will be held for a
period of some months, we usually share about experiences in early
recovery. We feel it is important to give practical information
about the NA program of recovery since inmates tend to get involved
in discussing what they are going to do about recovery when they get
out. We feel that recovery need not depend on, nor require, a
particular living situation. We try to impart the understanding that
we can remain drug-free under all situations and that the time to
begin recovery is now.
We consider facilities in which addicts are sentenced for more than
one year to be "long-term" facilities. Inmates in these facilities
are more likely to maintain their recovery while incarcerated, so in
this type of setting we encourage increased participation and
sharing by the inmates. Their participation can be anything from
setting up the chairs for the meeting to starting the meeting. In a
long-term facility this H&l meeting may be the only NA recovery
these addicts will experience for years. Encouraging them to be more
directly involved helps them follow the program throughout their
incarceration. The type of profound changes in an individual's
attitude, thinking, and behavior, brought about by working the NA
program can have a positive affect on others around him/her. Inmates
who become involved in their recovery get the opportunity to start
practicing a new way of life before their release. And, by following
a daily program, transition to the community can be a more positive
experience.
Transition from Incarceration to the Community and How NA Helps
An inmate's chance of sustaining recovery and avoiding recidivism is
enhanced with a planned community transition. Some of the practical
information provided by our NA H&l volunteers will help this. We
strongly encourage that inmates make a change in what we call
"playmates, playgrounds and playthings" since these familiar
surroundings can lead to relapse. To help support the recovering
addict we provide meeting directories, NA phoneline numbers, and
urge them to attend a meeting the first day upon release so they can
become connected to new associations immediately. Sometimes NA
members in the community choose, as individuals, to arrange to meet
inmates upon release. This is not a service provided by our NA H&l
volunteers. But once an inmate arrives at their first NA meeting in
the community, phone numbers are given and exchanged among members.
We suggest that the recently released addict find a sponsor - a more
experienced NA member who will share their suggestions for following
the NA program. Attending daily NA meetings also will help acclimate
them to this new way of living without drugs and provide needed
support in coping with "life on life's terms."
NA H&l meetings also are available to work release, halfway houses,
honor camps, and those facilities which house inmates after their
release from jail or prison and before they are allowed to fully
re-enter society. Because their program schedules allow for limited
attendance at outside NA meetings, such facilities usually have a
low priority for H&l subcommittees. In that event, we still provide
information and access to the NA program through local meeting
directories and the World Service Office Product Catalog. For a copy
of our product catalog please contact our international headquarters
listed below:
World Service Office
PO Box 9999, Van Nuys, CA 91409
Phone: (818) 773-9999
Fax: (818) 700-0700
Email: wso@na.org
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