Development
Narcotics Anonymous sprang from the Alcoholics Anonymous Program of the
late 1940s, with meetings first emerging in the Los Angeles area of California,
USA, in the early fifties. The NA program started as a small US movement
that has grown into one of the world's oldest and largest organizations
of its type.
For many years, NA grew very slowly, spreading from Los Angeles to other
major North American cities and Australia in the early 1970s. In 1983,
Narcotics Anonymous published its self-titled Basic Text book, which contributed
to tremendous growth. Within a few years, groups had formed in Brazil,
Colombia, Germany, India, the Irish Republic, Japan, New Zealand, and
the United Kingdom.
Today, Narcotics Anonymous is well established throughout much of the
Americas, Western Europe, Australia, and New Zealand. Newly formed groups
and NA communities are now scattered throughout the Indian subcontinent,
Africa, East Asia, the Middle East, and Eastern Europe. Narcotics Anonymous
books and information pamphlets are currently available in 23 languages,
with translations in process for 16 languages.
Program
NA’s earliest self-titled pamphlet, known among members as “the
White Booklet,” describes Narcotics Anonymous this way:
“NA is a nonprofit fellowship or society of men and women
for whom drugs had become a major problem. We … meet regularly
to help each other stay clean. ... We are not interested in what or
how much you used ... but only in what you want to do about your problem
and how we can help.”
Membership is open
to all drug addicts, regardless of the particular drug or combination
of drugs used. When adapting AA’s First Step, the word “addiction”
was substituted for “alcohol,” thus removing drug-specific
language and reflecting the “disease concept” of addiction.
There are no social, religious, economic, racial, ethnic, national,
gender, or class-status membership restrictions. There are no dues or
fees for membership; while most members regularly contribute small sums
to help cover the expenses of meetings, such contributions are not mandatory.
Narcotics Anonymous provides a recovery process and support network
inextricably linked together. One of the keys to NA’s success
is the therapeutic value of addicts working with other addicts. Members
share their successes and challenges in overcoming active addiction
and living drug-free productive lives through the application of the
principles contained within the Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions of
NA. These principles are the core of the Narcotics Anonymous recovery
program. Principles incorporated within the steps include:
- admitting there
is a problem;
- seeking help;
- engaging in
a thorough self-examination;
- confidential
self-disclosure;
- making amends
for harm done; and
- helping other
drug addicts who want to recover.
Central to the Narcotics
Anonymous program is its emphasis on practicing spiritual principles.
Narcotics Anonymous itself is non-religious, and each member is encouraged
to cultivate an individual understanding—religious or not—of
this “spiritual awakening.”
Narcotics Anonymous
is not affiliated with other organizations, including other twelve step
programs, treatment centers, or correctional facilities. As an organization,
NA does not employ professional counselors or therapists nor does it
provide residential facilities or clinics. Additionally, the fellowship
does not provide vocational, legal, financial, psychiatric, or medical
services. NA has only one mission: to provide an environment in which
addicts can help one another stop using drugs and find a new way to
live.
In Narcotics Anonymous, members are encouraged to comply with complete
abstinence from all drugs including alcohol. It has been the experience
of NA members that complete and continuous abstinence provides the best
foundation for recovery and personal growth. NA as a whole has no opinion
on outside issues, including prescribed medications. Use of psychiatric
medication and other medically indicated drugs prescribed by a physician
and taken under medical supervision is not seen as compromising a person’s
recovery in NA.
Service organization
The primary service provided by Narcotics Anonymous is the NA group
meeting. Each group runs itself based on principles common to the entire
organization, which are spelled out in NA’s literature.
Most groups rent space for their weekly meetings in buildings run by
public, religious, or civic organizations. Individual members lead the
NA meetings while other members take part by sharing in turn about their
experiences in recovering from drug addiction. Group members also share
the activities associated with running a meeting.
In a country where Narcotics Anonymous is a relatively new phenomenon,
the NA group is the only level of organization. In places where a number
of Narcotics Anonymous groups have had the chance to develop and stabilize,
groups will have elected delegates to form a local service committee.
These local committees usually offer a number of services. Included
among them are:
- distribution
of NA literature;
- telephone information
services;
- public information
presentations for treatment staff, civic organizations, government
agencies, and schools;
- panel presentations
to acquaint treatment or correctional facility residents with the
NA program; and
- meeting directories
for individual information and use in scheduling visits by client
groups.
In some countries,
especially the larger countries or those where Narcotics Anonymous is
well established, a number of local/area committees have come together
to create regional committees. These regional committees handle services
within their larger geographical boundaries while the local/area committees
handle local services.
An international delegate assembly known as the World Service Conference
provides guidance on issues affecting the entire organization. Primary
among the priorities of NA’s world services are activities that
support young national movements and the translation of Narcotics Anonymous
literature. For additional information, contact the World Service Office
headquarters in Los Angeles, California. The mailing address, telephone
number, fax number, and website address appear at the end of this pamphlet.
Positions on related issues or institutions
In order to maintain its focus, Narcotics Anonymous has established
a tradition of non-endorsement and does not take positions on anything
outside its own specific sphere of activity. Narcotics Anonymous does
not express opinions—either pro or con—on civil, social,
medical, legal, or religious issues. Additionally, it does not take
stands on addiction-related issues such as criminality, law enforcement,
drug legalization or penalties, prostitution, HIV/HCV infection, or
syringe programs.
Narcotics Anonymous is entirely self-supporting and does not accept
financial contributions from non-members. Based on the same principle,
groups and service committees are run by NA members, for members.
Narcotics Anonymous neither endorses nor opposes any other organization’s
philosophy or methodology. Its primary competence is in providing a
platform upon which drug addicts can share their recovery and experiences
with one another. This is not to say that Narcotics Anonymous believes
there are not any other “good” or “worthy” organizations.
To remain free of the distraction of controversy, NA focuses all of
its energy on its particular area of purpose, leaving other organizations
to fulfill their own goals.
Cooperating
with Narcotics Anonymous
Although certain traditions guide its relations with other organizations,
Narcotics Anonymous welcomes the cooperation of those in government,
the clergy, the helping professions, and private voluntary organizations.
NA’s nonaddict friends have been instrumental in getting Narcotics
Anonymous started in many countries and helping NA grow.
NA strives to cooperate with others interested in Narcotics Anonymous
by providing contact information, literature, and information about
recovery through the NA Fellowship. Additionally, NA members are often
available to make panel presentations in treatment centers and correctional
facilities, sharing the NA program with addicts otherwise unable to
attend community-based meetings.
Membership demographics
To offer some general informal observations about the nature of the
membership and the effectiveness of the program, the following observations
are believed to be reasonably accurate.
The socioeconomic strata represented by the NA membership vary from
country to country. Members of one particular social or economic class
start most national NA movements, but as their outreach activities become
more effective, the membership becomes more broadly representative of
all socioeconomic backgrounds.
All ethnic and religious backgrounds are represented among NA members.
Once a national movement reaches a certain level of maturity, its membership
generally reflects the diversity or homogeneity of the background culture.
Membership in Narcotics Anonymous is voluntary; no attendance records
are kept either for NA’s own purposes or for others. Because of
this, it is sometimes difficult to provide interested parties with comprehensive
information about NA membership. There are, however, some objective
measures that can be shared based on data obtained from members attending
one of our world conventions. A survey returned by almost half of the
13,500 attendees at the 2002 NA World Convention in Atlanta, Georgia
revealed the following:
- Gender: 55%
male, 44% female, and 1% did not answer.
- Age: 2% 20 years
old and under, 11% 21–30 years old, 32% 31–40 years old,41%
41–50 years old, 12% over age 51, and 2% did not answer.
- Ethnicity: 49%
Caucasian, 39% African-American, 4% Hispanic, 8% other.
- Employment status:
75% employed full-time, 8% employed part-time, 6% unemployed, 3% retired,
3% homemakers, 3% students, and 2% did not answer.
- Continuous abstinence/recovery:
ranged from less than one year to 33 years, with a mean average of
7.2 years.
Rate of
growth
Because no attendance records are kept, it is impossible to estimate
what percentages of those who come to Narcotics Anonymous remain active
in NA over time. The only sure indicator of the program’s success
is the rapid growth in the number of registered Narcotics Anonymous
meetings in recent decades and the rapid spread of Narcotics Anonymous
outside North America.
- In 1978, there
were fewer than 200 registered groups in three countries.
- In 1983, more
than a dozen countries had 2,966 meetings.
- In 1993, 60
countries had over 13,000 groups holding over 19,000 meetings.
- In 2002, there
are approximately 20,000 registered groups holding over 30,000 weekly
meetings in 108 countries.
More information may be obtained by contacting:
NA World Services, Inc.
PO Box 9999
Van Nuys, CA 91409-9099 USA
Tel: (+1) 818.773.9999 Fax: (+1) 818.700.0700
Website: www.na.org
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