Why this site exists, what it covers, and what it does not do.
Educational Information Only
This site is for education only and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always speak with a qualified, licensed clinician before making any decisions about medication or treatment. Naltrexone is a prescription medication and is not appropriate for everyone.
Most people who struggle with alcohol are told about three options: quit alone through willpower, go to AA or another peer support group, or enter rehab or a formal treatment program. These options have helped many people, and they deserve to exist.
But they are not the only options. And for many people — gray-area drinkers, high-functioning drinkers, binge drinkers, people who want to reduce rather than immediately commit to lifelong abstinence — they may not be the right fit.
The Sinclair Method is a medication-assisted approach to alcohol reduction that uses naltrexone to gradually reduce alcohol reward and reinforcement over time. It is supported by decades of clinical research. It is FDA-approved. And most people who could benefit from it have never heard of it.
Sinclair Method Guide exists to change that.
Sinclair Method Guide is an educational content resource. It is designed to explain the Sinclair Method clearly, honestly, and responsibly — for smart adults who want to understand their options without being lectured, shamed, or sold something.
This site is openly pro-Sinclair Method. It is called Sinclair Method Guide, not "All Alcohol Recovery Options Guide." It exists to make the fourth option easier to understand and harder to ignore.
That said, this site respects that AA, rehab, therapy, abstinence, and peer support have helped many people. It does not argue that those approaches never work. It argues that the Sinclair Method deserves to be on the menu — and that many people who could benefit from it are never told it exists.
Every page on this site is for educational purposes only. Before making any decisions about medication, treatment, or your health, speak with a qualified, licensed clinician.
This site is committed to accuracy, transparency, and medical responsibility. All content is reviewed for factual accuracy, appropriate sourcing, and responsible framing. See our Editorial Policy for details.
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