Sentences with phrase «pathological gamblers with»

Hollander et al used a double blind, placebo controlled design to examine the efficacy of a 10 week treatment of lithium on the clinical and cognitive features of gambling in pathological gamblers with bipolar spectrum disorder.
Does sustained - release lithium reduce impulsive gambling and affective instability versus placebo in pathological gamblers with bipolar spectrum disorders?
In collaboration between the University of Cambridge and Dr Henrietta Bowden - Jones, director of the UK's only specialist gambling clinic in the Central and North West London NHS Trust, Dr Clark and his colleagues compared the brains and behaviours of 86 male, pathological gamblers with those of 45 healthy men without a gambling problem.

Not exact matches

Some non-gambling sufferers seek relief from a different kind of pain through an organization called Gam - Anon, which works in parallel with Gamblers Anonymous and offers help to families victimized by pathological gGamblers Anonymous and offers help to families victimized by pathological gamblersgamblers.
Members of Gamblers Anonymous come together to try to drive away the demons that haunt those afflicted with the pathological compulsion to bet
When the researchers repeated the analysis to focus on problem gambling − a larger group of people than those with the more narrowly defined pathological gambling − they found that 16 percent of relatives of the pathological gamblers were problem gamblers compared to 3 percent of relatives of controls.
Additionally, gambling was associated with an increased likelihood of weapons being used in acts of violence, with more than a quarter in the pathological category, 18 per cent of problem gamblers, and seven per cent of non-problem gamblers reporting weapon usage.
We envision a world in which pathological gambling is understood to be a disease vs. a moral weakness; where the pathological gambler is treated with dignity and compassion; where resources and support are available to the pathological gambler and their loved ones.
As many as two million Americans are «pathological gamblers,» according to the National Council on Problem Gambling, with as many as another six million Americans considered «problem gamblers, people whose gambling affects their everyday lives.»
Female pathological gamblers often gamble with friends, which probably prevents them from withdrawing as easily as they may wish (Ladd & Petry, 2002a).
Petry (2001) showed that persons who were pathological gamblers, with and without substance abuse disorders, had very high rates of discounting delay rewards in a behavioral task.
People start on the path to pathological gambling for many reasons — financial problems, the gambler's fallacy, upbringing, etc. — but what determines whether one will become a problem gambler is how one deals with the addictiveness of gambling and the emotions gambling evokes.
A person with strong impulsivity will jump into situations without thinking of the consequences that the action might bring, but that does not mean that impulsivity will keep them in that situation over a prolonged period of time, as is characteristic of pathological gamblers.
Pathological gamblers, with and without substance use disorders, discount delayed rewards at high rates.
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