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Gambling
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Holy Quran Says in
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[the table verses]
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[91] Satan's plan is (but) to excite enmity and hatred between you, with intoxicants
and gambling, and hinder you from the remembrance of Allah, and from prayer:
will ye not then abstain?
What is
problem and compulsive gambling?
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Pathological, or compulsive gambling
is a progressive and eventually overwhelming urge to engage in gambling
behavior, an urge which at first the gambler fails to resist and later is unable
to resist. The diagnostic criteria for pathological gambling are now relatively
well known and were formally published both by the World Health Organization
(1979) and the American Psychiatric Association (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, 1980). Compulsive or pathological gambling is officially recognized as an illness and is
listed in the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV) as
a disorder of impulse control. The condition is defined as follows:
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"a chronic, progressive failure to
resist impulses to gamble and gambling behavior that compromises, disrupts, or
damages personal, family or vocation pursuits. The gambling preoccupation, urge,
and activity increases during periods of stress. Problems that arise as a result
of the gambling lead to an intensification of the gambling behavior.
Characteristic problems include loss of work due to absences in order to gamble,
defaulting on debts and other financial responsibilities, disrupted family
relationships, borrowing money from illegal sources, forgery, fraud,
embezzlement and income tax evasion."
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According to
the DSM-IV, Pathological Gambling can be diagnosed as persistent and recurrent
maladaptive gambling behavior, as indicated by five (or more) of the following:
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1.
is preoccupied with gambling (e.g. preoccupied with reliving
past gambling experiences, handicapping or planning the next venture, or
thinking of ways to get money with which to gamble);
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2.
needs to gamble with increasing amounts of money in order to
achieve the desired excitement;
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3.
has repeated unsuccessful efforts to control, cut back, or stop
gambling;
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4.
is restless or irritable when attempting to cut down or stop
gambling;
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5.
gambles as a way of escaping from problems or of relieving a
dysphonic mood (e.g. feelings of helplessness, guilt, anxiety, depression);
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6.
after losing money gambling, often returns another day to get
even ("chasing" one's losses);
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7.
lies to family members, therapist, or others to conceal the
extent of involvement with gambling;
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8.
has committed illegal acts such as forgery, fraud theft, or
embezzlement to finance gambling;
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9.
has jeopardized or lost a significant relationship, job, or
educational or career opportunity because of gambling;
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10.
relies on others to provide money to relieve a desperate
financial situation caused by gambling.
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This mentally crippling illness can
seriously handicap those addicted from being gainfully employed, and seriously
limit their ability to effectively carry out their familial responsibilities.
The ugly side of the compulsive gambling ledger is not only the loss of
productivity, broken homes and welfare costs, but also the criminal activities
of its addicted captives who frantically search, often illicitly, for the
finances to try again and again, in vain, to win back their losses. The end of
the road is the loss of employment, self respect and too often their lives
through their own self destruction in a last attempt to escape the life they
cannot any longer endure.
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Once pathological gambling is
recognized and self-admitted, it is very successfully treatable. The best and
most cost effective treatment available is the 12-step programmed of Gamblers
Anonymous, a fellowship for men and women who are self-admitted compulsive
gamblers. Entering this fellowship in combination with appropriate treatment is
successful for anyone who is determined to change their behavior and maintain
the new lifestyle advocated.
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Unfortunately, by the time the 1% of
diagnosable pathological gamblers seek help, it is usually as a result of the
break-up of the family, arrest and charges for gambling-related criminal
activity or suicide attempts. For these people in crisis, separation from
society and the triggers (such as money) and the stressors which encourage
gambling behavior, is critical to their survival and well-being. In many of
these cases, in-patient treatment coupled with the Gamblers Anonymous programmed
is the most effective treatment.
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