I echo the postings of these gentlemen on their suggestions.....Antabuse will make u sick if u drink on it...if u want to drink u don't take it!i haven't seen much success with it in my 23 years of dayjob in substance abuse field....have seen better results with Campral which kills craving.....but changeing ur ppl places and things like AA says is imperative......360 degree lifestyle change.....initially i didn't care for AA/NA...but it was the ONLY place that i could encounter sober/clean ppl...and like they say go to a meeting....take what u can use and leave the rest...and don't compare usrself outta the room!
hi. i would highly recommend bob's advice of giving aa another shot. the suggestion given by the basic text (and most groups) is to try it for a year. it takes time to undo the damage of years of abuse. the available medications are only effective when used in conjunction with a program of recovery, be it aa, private therapy, or other similar resource. antabuse is no joke. i've consumed alcohol while taking it and thought i was going to die. i am currently on campral and it seems to help, but the drug alone won't do it. best of luck, gm
I have not personally tried Antabuse. From my experience, I am led to understand that it probably helps some people. It is not guaranteed to work, and more than one person has confided to me that they drank repeatedly while taking it
There are other pharmaceutical approaches available - Campral, naltrexone, etc., that are available in addiction treatment. However, I believe they are usually prescribed with the requirement that the patient attend AA. Since AA is widely considered to be the gold standard of treatment,.I would urge you to return to it.
In addition, I would encourage you to utilize the most comprehensive approach possible, using AA, a psychologist, a psychiatrist, out patient treatment, an employment assistant program, any organized religion resources you customarily frequent, etc, and anything else you can think of.
Good luck.