Sexual Compulsives Anonymous

[4] Although the fellowship originally sought to address issues of sexual compulsion among gay and bisexual men, and this is still the fellowships predominant demographic, today the program is LGBT friendly, open to all sexual orientations, and there is an increasing number of women and heterosexual men participating.

[5][6][7] SCA meetings are most likely to be held in urban areas with larger gay and bisexual male populations.

The high-risk column includes behaviors, emotional states, ritualized activities, and situations that make them vulnerable to relapse.

[6] SCA distributes its own literature, including the primary book used in the fellowship, Sexual Compulsives Anonymous: A Program of Recovery, and several book-length and smaller brochures and pamphlets, such as What About Masturbation?, Q&A: A Guide for Newcomers and Secret Shame.

[8] SCA developed "The Twenty Questions," an instrument allowing potential members to self-evaluate their sexual compulsivity.

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A sample of a (blank) SCA recovery plan document