Measuring pathological gambling in children: The case of fruit machines in the U.K.
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Gambling Studies
- Vol. 8 (3) , 263-285
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01014653
Abstract
The alleged incidence of addiction to fruit machine gambling among children in the U.K. has highlighted the need for a measure to define and count pathological gambling in children. The DSM-IV criteria, which are being refined to diagnose pathological gambling in adults, was adapted for use with pre-adult gamblers. The resulting DSM-IV-J criteria were tested using a questionnaire survey on a sample of 467 schoolchildren aged between 11 and 16 years. Those children who were defined as "probable pathological" gamblers by the DSM-IV-J index were significantly more likely to be involved in behaviours hitherto associated with dependency, than were the control group. DSM-IV-J appears to be a major advance in the discrimination of pathological gambling in children.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Governmental response to juvenile fruit machine gambling in the U.K: Where do we go from here?Journal of Gambling Studies, 1991
- Pathological gambling: A review of the literature (prepared for the American Psychiatric Association task force on DSM-IV committee on disorders of impulse control not elsewhere classified)Journal of Gambling Studies, 1991
- The cognitive psychology of gamblingJournal of Gambling Studies, 1990
- Altering the DSM-III criteria for pathological gamblingJournal of Gambling Studies, 1988
- YOUNG OFFENDERS, GAMBLING AND VIDEO GAME PLAYINGThe British Journal of Criminology, 1987