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APA Press Release
September 16, 2008
OLDER PROBLEM GAMBLERS MAY FACE GREATER SUICIDE RISK THAN YOUNGER COUNTERPARTS, STUDY FINDSPreference for Non-Strategic Games May Accelerate Downward Spiral
WASHINGTON—Compared to their younger counterparts, older problem gamblers who ask casinos to bar them from returning are three to four times more likely to do so because they fear they will kill themselves if they don’t stop betting, according to a new study.
• Compared to younger adults, older adults were more likely to prefer non-strategic games such as slot machines, video poker and lottery tickets. The researchers noted that such preferences may accelerate the onset of gambling problems, particularly in light of the misperceptions of randomness and the probability of winning such games. • In addition, the older adults in this sample began gambling at a significantly later age than the other two groups. “In particular, older women began gambling at about 49 but did not experience serious gambling problems until around the age of 60,” the researchers wrote. “In contrast, men began gambling more than a decade earlier, at 37, and also self-excluded around age 60.” • Older adults are also less likely to receive mental health treatment, due to factors including inadequate Medicare coverage, under-diagnosis and a lack of physician referrals. “This reluctance to access care, combined with the increased potential for suicidal ideation, could increase the risk for self-harm among older adult problem gamblers without targeted interventions to assist them in accessing services,” the researchers wrote. Article: “Characteristics of Problem Gamblers 56 Years of Age or Older: A Statewide Study of Casino Self-Excluders,” Lia Nower, PhD, JD, Rutgers University Center for Gambling Studies, and Alex Blaszczynski, PhD, University of Sydney; Psychology and Aging, Vol. 23, No. 2. (Full text of the article is available from the APA Public Affairs Office and at http://www.apa.org/journals/releases/pag233577.pdf Contact Lia Nower by e-mail or phone, 732-932-7520 x114.
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