Date: Sunday, October 9th 2022
Time: 10h30
Meeting Place: Pfaffikon, ZH Train Station
Date: Sunday, October 9th 2022
Time: 10h30
Meeting Place: Pfaffikon, ZH Train Station
Outreach to Health Care Professionals (HCP) Working Group
SUMMARY
Zoom Meeting link https://bit.ly/3NseEfB-HCP-KickOff Meeting ID: 837 8305 2169 PW: 658696
NEW WORKING GROUP SERVICE OPP
Following a membership Survey in Feb-Mar, we have formed an outreach working group (WG). The WG purpose is to reach local health professionals with information about AA, always seeking to establish the principle of attraction rather than promotion.
This is a great opportunity to do service. There are no minimum lengths of sobriety required to join.
WHAT WILL THIS WORKING GROUP DO?
In broad terms, we will drive an information campaign in the Zurich area to create awareness among local HCP that English-speaking AA offers an ideal support community for their alcoholic patients and clients.
It may involve speaking at treatment facilities and schools, or contacting doctors and representatives at medical facilities to help them understand what AA is (and is not), how AA works and what we can (and cannot) offer. These are just a few examples of the types of service that we may get involved in. This “Intro to AA” slide deck is representative of our outreach message.
Zurich Outreach Working Group Kick-Off Meeting Wed. 15 June, 19:00-20:00 (ZOOM) Contact: Joel B. Health Liaison Officer for Continental European Region Email: health.cer@aamail.org
The recent Zurich membership Survey confirms we have a strong English-speaking fellowship available to support local Health Care Professionals (HCP). The results have been gathered into a slidedeck as an intro for HCP (doctors, therapists, clinic admins, etc.) to our local AA community.
DOES AA WORK?
The data offers proof AA works: 84% of members who took the survey have 1 or more years of sobriety and 40% have been sober 5 years or longer.
MISCONCEPTIONS PERSIST
But the HCP establishment in Switzerland rarely refers problem drinkers to AA and misconceptions about alcoholism and recovery persist. Just last week, a young man told me he once sought professional assistance for violent behavior when drinking. One of their counselors advised him to continue drinking – but limit the amount he drank. (if only ..)
Fortunately, he found AA and its solution before he lost his marriage or worse. Today he is a sober active member of our Zurich fellowship and has offered to get a meeting with those same counselors to share AA’s experience about alcoholism. Here’s another example:
DEEP BREATH B4 READING
On 03.03.2022, I received the following email to my health.cer@aamail.org inbox. The sender has granted her permission to share it with AA members:
I live in France, just outside of Geneva, Switzerland and am reading your very timely ArenA article. I am an active fellow in AA Geneva and have been sober for 13 years. I recently went on a 12th step call after someone called the helpline for a young woman who was drinking in a hotel room and could not stop. She took herself to ER (hospital) twice but was sent away. We called an ambulance who came and they decided she was ‘not bad enough’ to be taken to hospital. SOS médecin would not come to the hotel when we called. The psychiatric hospital gave her a date 6 days later to come and dry out. She was found dead in her bed by day 5.
I am still reeling from the experience and now know how much work is needed with the medical professionals to educate them.
Name withheld upon request
ZURICH OUTREACH INITIATIVE
Whatever reaction you had about the death of another alcoholic reprinted above, I couldn’t help but think ‘that could have been me .. but for the grace of God’ and if you’re reading this post, you are living proof alcoholism does not have to be a death sentence.
But in my service position as Health Liaison Officer (HLO) of English-speaking AA Continental European Region (CER) – of which Zurich Intergroup is a member, I can only assist members, groups and IGs to share best practice how to cooperate with local health professionals.
One such initiative originated by a former pharma exec from AA Basel. Thanks to his HCP industry insight, pilot initiatives are now running in Basel and Zurich fellowships – with Geneva soon to follow. The lessons we’re learning will then be shared for local adaptation across our fellowships in Europe.
THREE WAYS TO TAKE ACTION
Are you willing to help problem drinkers around Zurich find AA through their HCP?
If so, here are 3 ways to take action right now:
“Physicians who are familiar with alcoholism agree there is no such thing as making a normal drinker out of an alcoholic.” (Alcoholics Anonymous, p. 31)
Each group has but one primary purpose – to carry its message to the alcoholic who still suffers. (Tradition 5, The Twelve Traditions of Alcoholics Anonymous)
Submitted by Joel B.
Health Liaison Officer of Continental European Region of Alcoholics Anonymous Great Britain
Email health.cer@aamail.org
Due to the weather conditions we will be having our BBQ/hike on our rain date – Saturday, April 9th.
NOTE: The new deadline for participation is
Wednesday, April 6th.
A sober fun seeking, music loving group of different ages will be going to the Zurich Openair. The concerts take place in the evenings during the week, and start in the afternoon on Friday & Saturday. So, we’ll be having an AA meeting point where we will be meeting during the opening hours (no sleeping in tents and such!).
Come join us! The fun doesn’t stop when we get sober – it just gets better!
To order tickets: https://zurichopenair.ch/en/
For more info email: rainbowroom@gmx.ch