A new study conducted by the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation and the American Bar Association Commission on Lawyer Assistance Programs reveals substantial and widespread levels of problem drinking and other behavioral health problems in the U.S. legal profession.
Posted online this week in the Journal of Addiction Medicine, the study reports that 21 percent of licensed, employed attorneys qualify as problem drinkers, 28 percent struggle with some level of depression and 19 percent demonstrate symptoms of anxiety.
The study found that younger attorneys in the first 10 years of practice exhibit the highest incidence of these problems.
The print edition of the journal will be available in mid-February.
The findings of the national study represent a reversal of previous research that indicated rates of problem drinking increased as individuals spent more time in the legal profession.
When focusing solely on the volume and frequency of alcohol consumed, more than one in three practicing attorneys are problem drinkers, the study found.
Attorney and clinician Patrick R. Krill, Hazelden’s architect of the project and lead author of the study, said the findings are a call to action.
“This long-overdue study clearly validates the widely held but empirically undersupported view that our profession faces truly significant challenges related to attorney well-being,” Krill said.
“Any way you look at it, this data is very alarming and paints the picture of an unsustainable professional culture that’s harming too many people.”
Attorney impairment, Krill said, “poses risks to the struggling individuals themselves and to our communities, government, economy and society. The stakes are too high for inaction.”
Linda Albert, a co-author of the study and representative of the ABA Commission on Lawyer Assistance Programs, said there are countless ways this data will benefit the profession.
“While the numbers themselves are disheartening, the instructive value of the information is enormous and tells us that the problem is best approached from a systems perspective,” she said.
“All sectors of the profession will benefit from reading, understanding and utilizing this important study, and now we can better develop strategies for preventing and addressing substance use problems and mental health concerns in this population.”
The study compared attorneys with other professionals, including doctors, and determined that lawyers experience alcohol use disorders at a far higher rate than other professional populations, as well as mental health distress that is more significant.
The study also found that the most common barriers for attorneys to seek help were fear of others finding out and general concerns about confidentiality.
“This new research demonstrates how the pressures felt by many lawyers manifest in health risks,” ABA President Paulette Brown said. “These ground-breaking findings provide an important guide as the ABA commission works with lawyer assistance programs nationally to address the mental health risks and needs of lawyers.”
Approximately 15,000 attorneys from 19 states and across all regions of the country participated in the study.
The Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation offers prevention and recovery solutions nationwide and across the entire continuum of care for youth and adults. It includes a specialized program for legal professionals.
The ABA Commission on Lawyer Assistance Programs has the mandate to educate the legal profession concerning alcoholism, chemical dependencies, stress, depression and other emotional health issues, and assist and support all bar associations and lawyer assistance programs in developing and maintaining methods of providing effective solutions for recovery.
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