Gambling similar to substance abuse in adolescents –Experts

Gambling similar to substance abuse in adolescents –Experts


Survey of secondary school students reinforces protective function of family cohesion and importance of controlling the establishment of gambling centres.
Researchers, in the new study, also have found that about 26.1 per cent of secondary school students in Nigeria’s rural areas have developed gambling disorder.
The study, carried out among secondary school students in Igboora, a rural community in South West Nigeria, at least 26 per cent of them had gambled at least once.
The researchers said those found gambling also had a lower quality of life compared to their counterparties that were not into gambling.
Also, a higher odds for gambling was recorded among those whose friends also gamble or living near gambling centres.
The study, at the sideline of 2017 iResearch meeting and fair of the College of Medicine, University of Ibadan included Drs Olaide Olabumoye, Obioma Uchendu and Oladipo Ogunbode at the University of Ibadan in conjunction with Professor Odunsanya  at the Lagos State College of medicine. It was organised by the College of Medicine Research and Innovation Management (CRIM) unit.
“Gambling is a mental health disorder spectrum that includes at risk gambling and problemgambling. There is a similarity between problemgambling and substance abuse. This has influenced its classification as an addiction,” said Dr Olabumoye.
She declared that gamblingdisorders are associated with numerous negative consequences and are highly correlated with other risky behaviours in the college student population.
According to her, although most people seegambling as something that is more in urban communities, civilisation, the use of devices and access to internet had made it spread beyond urban areas.
Dr Olabumoye, who remarked that age of people intogambling was decreasing, said gambling in adolescents could become a serious problem that results into psychological difficulties, unmanageable debt and failing school grades.
She said that Nigeria needs to have legislation to control siting of gambling centres, while urging parents to get more involved in their children’s social life as well as be good role models for them.
Also, she said that schools need to engage students more when they are within the school premises, adding, “we found that schools that had good connection with them and maintains good discipline had fewer students involved ingambling.”
Research has shown that teenagers and college-aged young adults are more impulsive and at higher risk for developing gamblingdisorders than adults.
Most adults with a gambling problem startedgambling at an early age. Scientists have learned that the adolescent brain is still growing, which accounts for the frequently impulsive behaviour and unwise decisions of teenagers.