What’s in a Name? Evaluating the Public Stigma of Gambling Disorder

被引:0
作者
Leanne Quigley
Jennifer Prentice
Jonathan T. Warren
Lena C. Quilty
Keith S. Dobson
David C. Hodgins
机构
[1] Yeshiva University,Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology
[2] University of Calgary,Department of Psychology
[3] Centre for Addiction and Mental Health,Campbell Family Mental Health Research Institute
[4] University of Toronto,Department of Psychiatry
来源
Journal of Gambling Studies | 2020年 / 36卷
关键词
Gambling disorder; Stigma; Labeling; Problem gambling;
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学科分类号
摘要
Public stigma of gambling disorder has negative effects on the mental health and functioning of affected individuals and impedes treatment-seeking. One factor thought to be implicated in stigma is the label used to describe the condition. The aims of this research were to: (1) evaluate whether different labels for problematic gambling behavior influence public stigma; and (2) compare public stigma of gambling disorder to other health conditions. Separate samples of university student (Study 1) and general population (Study 2) participants were randomly assigned to label conditions and completed questionnaires assessing stigma and attitudes towards the assigned label. In Study 1, the eight conditions included four gambling labels (problem gambling, pathological gambling, gambling disorder, and gambling addiction) and four psychiatric or health comparison labels (depression, obsessive–compulsive disorder, alcohol use disorder, and asthma). In Study 2, compulsive buying disorder was added as a fifth psychiatric comparison for a total of nine conditions. The results indicated that the four gambling label conditions elicited similar attitudes and stigma. Those conditions were also more stigmatized than the depression, obsessive–compulsive disorder, and asthma conditions. The gambling conditions elicited similar stigmatizing attitudes as alcohol use disorder but were slightly more stigmatized than compulsive buying disorder, with these conditions showing both similarities and differences across the stigma-related outcomes. The results were largely consistent across both samples and contribute to knowledge of the nature and origins of gambling-related stigma.
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页码:1205 / 1228
页数:23
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