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Pathological Gambling

Southern Medical Journal, 2006
Abstract This chapter presents an integrated, moral-therapeutic perspective on pathological gambling. Such a perspective emphasizes helping individuals to accept responsibility, where responsibility refers to obligations rather than to blame. It understands therapy as a special moral context rather than as replacing morality.
Lorne M. Korman   +2 more
  +5 more sources

PATHOLOGICAL GAMBLING

Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 2000
With increasing access to gambling facilities through casinos, the Internet, and other venues, PG is a rapidly emerging mental health concern. This impulse-control disorder tends to be comorbid with a wide range of other disorders and is reportedly associated with a high rate of suicide.
E, Hollander   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Pathological Gambling

Archives of General Psychiatry, 1988
We investigated psychobiological substrates of pathological gambling by measuring levels of norepinephrine, monoamine metabolites, and peptides in cerebrospinal fluid, plasma, and urine. Pathological gamblers had a significantly higher centrally produced fraction of cerebrospinal fluid levels of 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol as well as significantly ...
Roy, A   +9 more
openaire   +3 more sources

PATHOLOGICAL GAMBLING

Medical Journal of Australia, 1979
According to DSM-III criteria, pathological gambling is now recognised as a mental illness. Epidemiological data suggest that the incidence of this disorder in the general population varies from 0.5% to 1%. However, until recently, psychiatrists and clinical psychologists have tended to neglect the problem because of a lack of understanding of its ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Pathologic gambling.

The Nurse practitioner, 1998
Pathologic gambling is recognized and clearly defined by the American Psychiatric Association. However, many Americans suffer from an addiction to gambling that is undiagnosed and, therefore, untreated. Pathologic gambling, like any other addiction, can be devastating.
openaire   +3 more sources

Pathological Gambling

Psychiatric Annals, 1992
The case of a patient with a pathological urge to gamble is presented. Until 1990, gambling casinos were prohibited in Denmark. In 1990, a new law was enforced which permitted six casinos in Denmark. Previously, no reports were available in the medical literature concerning pathological gambling in Denmark.
openaire   +3 more sources

Genetics of Pathological Gambling

Journal of Gambling Studies, 2003
Pathological gambling (PG) is an impulse control disorder and a model 'behavioral' addiction. Familial factors have been observed in clinical studies of pathological gamblers, and twin studies have demonstrated a genetic influence contributing to the development of PG.
Angela, Ibáñez   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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