There's one called Smart Recovery that is more along those lines. They put a lot of effort into keeping their practice in line with the state of the art of mainstream mental health and scientific practice around addiction, and are explicitly secular.
They're based around harm reduction, so no day-counting or rigid definition of sobriety like AA which honestly is wonderful and AA could (and does!) learn a lot from it. Alcoholics already carry a lot of shame, increasing it isn't helpful imo.
It doesn't have the reach or widespread cultural awareness that AA does but they still seem pretty common. I think AA is only really a good fit for people who are already religious or are open to becoming so. Otherwise I generally do suggest people try smart recovery first.
They're based around harm reduction, so no day-counting or rigid definition of sobriety like AA which honestly is wonderful and AA could (and does!) learn a lot from it. Alcoholics already carry a lot of shame, increasing it isn't helpful imo.
It doesn't have the reach or widespread cultural awareness that AA does but they still seem pretty common. I think AA is only really a good fit for people who are already religious or are open to becoming so. Otherwise I generally do suggest people try smart recovery first.