4.5 Article

The Prevalence, Mental Health and Criminal Characteristics of Potential Problem Gamblers in a Substance Using Treatment Seeking Population

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11469-015-9604-8

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Problem gambling; Mental health; Criminality; Impulsivity

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Some recent evidence suggests that problem gambling presents at elevated rates among treatment samples of substance users; if so, there may be significant implications for treatment. This study utilised a retrospective clinical case file review of all clients assessed for entry into a residential substance use service in Australia over a calendar year. Fifty-seven (21.4 %) of the 266 participants were classified as potential problem gamblers. Potential problem gamblers (PPGs) were not associated with increased psychological and social vulnerability; but displayed phenomenology divergent from single substance addiction, indicative of impulsivity. PPGs were more likely to be male, have a personality disorder, and be associated with a broader pattern of criminality, particularly crimes associated with financial gain. These findings challenge the recent re-conceptualisation of problem gambling, suggesting that problem gambling within treatment populations of substance users should be treated as a disorder adjacent to substance addiction, associated with distinct and specific phenomenology.

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