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Problem Gambling
Joseph W. Ciarrocchi, Ph.D. & Anna Marie Ciarrocchi,
MSW, LCSW-C
Vol. VI No. 2
March/April, 2002
Problem gambling is a serious condition that conservatively
affects 4 million Americans over the course of their lifetime, with
estimates as high as 10 million. Since roughly 1 to 1.5% of the population
meet criteria for the most serious types of gambling problems, it
is not unexpected that the condition will be found among clergy and
religious. Just as abstaining from alcohol is difficult in a culture
that drinks socially, abstaining from gambling is difficult in a
country where 86% of its citizens will gamble sometime over their
lifetime. In any given year 68% of Americans gamble and in the past
25 years rates of women gambling have doubled men's so that frequency
of gambling for men and women are equal.
Although men and women gamble at the same rate, women
are up to ten times less likely than men to enter treatment. The
reasons for this
disparity are not totally clear. Social stigma may prevent women
from admitting they have a problem, the amounts women gamble may
make it less likely that their problem will be discovered, or existing
treatment programs may not meet the needs of women.
To answer the question why gambling and not another
addiction, there is no relevant research. One might reasonably speculate
both
an environmental
factor (gambling parents or family members) as well as a personality
factor (being higher on impulsiveness than drug addicts.)
Signs and Symptoms
The signs of pathological gambling are fairly straightforward:
- Preoccupation
with gambling: An increasing amount of time is spent gambling,
thinking about gambling, or thinking about ways to
obtain money in order to gamble.
- Gambling with increasing
amounts: A tolerance to the effect of gambling develops so one gambles
more and more often to achieve
the desired excitement.
- Mood Changes: The individual becomes
restless or irritable when unable to gamble.
- Inability to stop,
cut down, or control gambling: The individual speaks about
'managing' gambling while going further in the
hole financially.
- Gambling in order to escape
personal problems or negative emotions: The problem gambler heads to the casino
when bored or lonely,
stressed or overwhelmed.
- "Chasing" losses: After losing
money, the person returns another day to get even, to chase and
win what
they lost, throwing good money after bad.
- Lying to family, friends,
employers and therapists to conceal
gambling: The problem gambler often minimizes any problems,
and/or underestimates
debt,
even by thousands
of dollars
- Taking money from others in order to
finance gambling: Problem gamblers may embezzle or commit fraud to finance gambling.
- Jeopardizing
a significant relationship, job, educational, or
career opportunity: There is a serious loss of trust by
others: family,
co-workers, community
or diocese.
- Needing money from others
to relieve a desperate financial situation caused by gambling: Financial situations
can be so
bad, others
(dioceses or communities)
are forced to bail out problem gamblers to avoid high
interest payments over the long haul.
Treatment
The following guidelines provide a minimum foundation for the recovery
process. Problem gamblers need:
- help to monitor finances closely. Discretionary funds
are to be kept at a minimum,
with no access to credit cards,
loans, or savings of
their own or anyone else's.
- to
attend Gambler's Anonymous, a self-help group that operates in the 12-step
tradition.
- to enter individual therapy to develop alternative
strategies to deal with negative feelings
and what underlies
their addiction.
After evaluation, psychiatric medication
may be
prescribed to address mood disorders that are common in this group.
- to
develop some means to pay back money used or stolen. Even if the sum seems
to
be a token amount without possibility of complete recompense,
the regular
reminder
could serve as a deterrent to future relapse.
- to think about gambling
the way recovering alcoholics think of liquor, namely
with
the intention of abstinence.
Until therapy begins it is impossible to know what
other issues will emerge that are linked to problem gambling. For
example, a 63-year-old high school principal
and member of a religious community embezzled funds from the school to play
cards at the casino. After the public scandal and while in treatment,
he revealed that
he was terrified of facing retirement. He had led a faithful celibate life
but was frightened about slipping into terminal loneliness once he
no longer had
meaningful employment.
The positive news is that treatment for pathological
gambling can be quite effective. Many can return to active ministry
and, in some cases, manage their own finances.
Individual or group therapy, attending Gamblers Anonymous, meaningful ministry,
and a supportive community provide the best hope for combating this potentially
devastating but quite treatable addiction. Joseph W. Ciarrocchi, Ph.D., a Clinical Psychologist,
is Professor, and Director of Doctoral Clinical Education, Graduate
Programs in Pastoral Counseling, Loyola
College in Maryland.
Anna Marie Ciarrocchi, MSW, LCSW-C, is a staff therapist
at Saint Luke Institute. LUKENOTES is a bimonthly
publication of Saint Luke Institute.
Permission to use these materials must be requested in writing
by contacting
lukenotes@sli.org SLI EDUCATION
DEPARTMENT
Saint Luke Institute
8901 New Hampshire Ave.
Silver Spring, MD 20903
(301) 422-5499 • (301) 422-5519 (fax)
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