preview

Pathological Gambling Research Paper

Better Essays

“Pathological gambling is excessive risk taking exaggerated to an especially destructive extreme.” This is the way Dr. Ted and Brad Klontz open their chapter on the destructive behavior that is gambling (Klontz, B., & Klontz, T, 2009). As the authors describe gambling is a habit that becomes like a drug as people, mostly men, continue to gamble to make themselves feel better about themselves or to escape their present reality. The biggest danger of this disorder is that it is one that people try to hide from others the most, and are very hesitant to admit that their gambling is an addiction. According to the New York Times pathological gambling is a disorder that usually begins in men in early adolescence, and between ages 20 and 40 for women. …show more content…

His gambling as the manager of the Cincinnati Reds, has caused him to become the only person to be ruled ineligible from the MLB Hall of Fame, despite the fact that he had the most hits in baseball history. To this day Rose still claims that he never bet against the Reds, but instead bet on the Reds every night. Basketball star Michael Jordan is known for always being the best on the court, but that wasn’t always the case at the casinos. According to the Business Insider, Michael Jordan lost $165,000 in one night a day before a game against the New York Knicks. The gambling hasn’t stopped since he retired as “a San Diego businessman, claimed MJ owed him $1.25 million after a game of …show more content…

Results of the 2012 study done by the NCAA showed that “57 percent of male student-athletes and 39 percent of female student-athletes reported gambling in some form during the past year.” While pathological gambling is not normally a huge concern for these athletes based on the small sum of money they have to risk, it is a behavior that could lead to compulsive gambling after college. According to the study are just ask likely as their non-athletic peers to gamble and when they do are likely to bet at higher rates. When asked what the most alarming trend regarding youths participating in gambling was Jeff Derevensky, the director of the International Center for Youth Gambling Problems and High-Risk Behaviors at McGill University in Montreal, noted that “electronic forms of gambling have made it accessible to the average person 24 hours a day, seven days a week.” Deverensky even included the government, noting their support of lotteries as a “voluntary

Get Access