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Gambling
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What Is Wrong With Gambling?
JOHN, mentioned in the preceding article, became a problem gambler.* He moved to Australia, where he got married to Linda, also a gambler. John's addiction grew worse. He says: "I progressed from buying lottery tickets to betting on racehorses and gambling at casinos. I ended up gambling nearly every day. I sometimes gambled away my whole paycheck and had nothing left with which to pay the mortgage or feed the family. Even when I won a lot of money, I continued to gamble. It was the thrill of winning that hooked me." Individuals like John are not uncommon. Whole societies seem to have caught gambling fever. The magazine USA Today said that between 1976 and 1997, there was a staggering 3,200-percent increase in the amount wagered on legalized gambling in the United States. "Gambling used to be considered a moral and social evil. Today it's a socially acceptable pastime," states the Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail. Identifying one reason for this change in public attitude, the paper says: "The image makeover is the direct result of what may be the most expensive and most sustained government-funded advertising campaign in Canadian history." What impact have efforts to promote gambling had on some societies? |
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An Epidemic of Problem GamblingAccording to an estimate made by the Harvard Medical School Division on Addictions, in 1996 there were "7.5 million American adult problem and pathological gamblers" and an additional "7.9 million American adolescent problem and pathological gamblers." These figures were included in a report compiled by the National Gambling Impact Study Commission (NGISC), which was presented to the U.S. Congress. The report stated that the number of people with gambling problems in America might actually be significantly higher than recorded. Because of job loss, diminished physical health, the payment of unemployment benefits, and the cost of treatment programs, problem gambling is estimated to cost U.S. society billions of dollars every year. This figure, though, does little to portray the human cost of problem gamblingthe cost to families, friends, and workmates, resulting from theft, embezzlement, suicide, domestic violence, and child abuse. An Australian study found that up to ten people can be directly affected by every problem gambler. A report from the National Research Council in the United States says that up to "50 percent of spouses and 10 percent of children experienced physical abuse from the pathological gambler." |
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A Contagious AddictionLike some diseases, problem gambling can seem to spread from parent to child. "Children of compulsive gamblers are more likely to engage in delinquent behaviors such as smoking, drinking, and using drugs, and have an increased risk of developing problem or pathological gambling themselves," states the NGISC report. The report also warns that "adolescent gamblers are more likely than adults to develop problem and pathological gambling." Dr. Howard J. Shaffer, director of the Harvard Medical School's Division on Addiction Studies, says: "There is an emerging body of evidence suggesting that illicit gambling among young people is increasing at a rate at least proportional to the opportunity to gamble legally." As for the potential for pathological gamblers to abuse the technology of the Internet, he says: "As smoking crack cocaine changed the cocaine experience, I think electronics is going to change the way gambling is experienced." The gambling trade is often portrayed as supplying harmless fun. But for adolescents, gambling can be as addictive as any illicit drug and can lead to criminal behavior. A survey in the United Kingdom found that among adolescents who gambled, "46 percent stole from their family" to support their habit. Despite the foregoing facts, one influential gambling association justifies the promotion of gambling by saying: "The vast majority of Americans who enjoy gaming experience no problem whatsoever." Even if you feel that gambling does not adversely affect your financial or physical health, what impact does gambling have on your spiritual health? Are there good reasons why you should avoid gambling? The following article will consider these questions.
* See the box "Do I Have a Gambling Problem?" |
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Appeared in Awake! July 22, 2002 |
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