Pathological Gambling and Poly-Behavioral Addiction
The reasons for initially trying different
socially acceptable legal drugs (e.g. alcohol, cigarettes, etc.), and/
or illegal drugs, or for that matter any addictive behavior involvement
(e.g. gambling, binge-eating, etc.) are multi-factored (e.g. peer-pressure,
boredom, etc.). In the twentieth century approximately 65% (Helzer et al.,
1990) of healthy American individuals (born in a family--free from a history
of substance abuse for example, and raised in a positive environment with
positive values and conditioning) experiment with underage drinking and
possibly smoking cigarettes at least once as adolescents or during a “college
dorm - binge drinking” - phase of life.
Because human behavior is so complex,
an attempt to understand the reasons individuals continue to use, and/
or abuse themselves with substances and/ or maladaptive behaviors to the
point of developing self-defeating behavior patterns and/ or other life-style
dysfunctions or self-harm is enormously difficult to achieve. Many researchers
therefore prefer to speak of risk factors that may contribute, but not
be sufficient to cause addictions. They point to an eclectic bio-psychosocial
approach that involves the multi-dimensional interactions of genetics,
biochemistry, psychology, socio-cultural, and spiritual influences.
Risk Factors / Contributory Causes
/ Influences:
1. Genetics (family history) – is
known to play a role in causing susceptibility through such biological
avenues as metabolic rates and sensitivity to alcohol and/ or other drugs
or addictive behaviors.
2. Biochemistry – the discovery of
morphine-like substances called endorphins (runners high, etc.) and the
so-called “pleasure pathway” – the mesocorticolimbic dopamine pathway (MCLP).
This is the brain center or possible anatomic site underlying addictions
at which alcohol and other drugs stimulate to produce euphoria – which
then becomes the desired goal to attain (tolerance – loss of control –
withdrawal).
3. Psychological Factors – developmental
personality traits, vulnerability to stress, and the desire for tension
and symptom reduction from various mental health problems and traumatic
life experiences.
4. Socio-cultural/ Spiritual Factors
– cultural attitudes, marital, relational, legal, financial, and religious
psycho-social stressors (etc.), along with the existence of a so-called
drug culture that promotes the availability of alcohol and other drugs
and/ or addictive behaviors as tension reducers and/ or pain relievers.
Family genetics, and bio-psychosocial,
historical, and developmental conditioning factors are difficult and sometimes
impossible to be changed within individuals. The standardized performance-based
Addictions Recovery Measurement System philosophy incorporates a bio-psychosocial
disease model that focuses on a cognitive behavioral perspective in attempting
to alter maladaptive thinking and improve a person’s abilities and behaviors
to solve problems and plan for sustained recovery. Many healthcare consumers
of addiction recovery services have a genetic pre-dispositional history
for addiction. They have suffered and continue to suffer from past traumatic
life experiences (e.g. physical, sexual, and emotional abuse, etc.) and
often present with psychosocial stressors (e.g. occupational stress, family/
marital problems, etc.) leaving them with intense and confusing feelings
(e.g. anger, anxiety, bitterness, fear, guilt, grief, loneliness, depression,
and inferiority, etc.) that reinforce their already low self-esteem. The
complex interaction of these factors can leave the individual with much
deeper mental health problems involving self-hatred, self-punishment, self-denial,
low self-control, low self-respect, and a severe low self-esteem condition,
with an overall (sometimes hidden) negative self-identity.
There are many definitions for addiction
as it is a complex phenomenon. The American Psychiatric Association avoids
the term entirely. The World Health Organization defined addiction as “a
state of periodic and/ or chronic intoxication produced by the repeated
consumption of a natural or synthetic drug. This state of intoxication
is manifested by an overpowering desire, need or compulsion with the presence
of a tendency to increase the dose and evidence of phenomena of tolerance,
abstinence and withdrawal, in which there is always psychic and physical
dependence on the effects of the drug” (Gossop and Grant, 1990, p. 20).
Addictive diseases generally have
been associated with substance abuse. More recently, the concept of addiction
has been broadened to include behavior patterns that do not necessarily
include alcohol or drugs. Bradshaw (1990) defines addiction as a "pathological
relationship to any mood-altering person, thing, substance, or activity
that has life-damaging consequences" (p. VIII). Arterburn and Felton (1992)
define addiction as "the presence of a psychological and physiological
dependency on a substance, relationship, or behavior" (p. 104). Shaef (1987)
defines addiction as "any process over which we are powerless. Addiction
takes control of us, causing us to do and think things that are inconsistent
with our personal values, and which lead us to become progressively more
compulsive and obsessive" (p. 18). She divides addictions into two broad
categories: Substance addictions (e.g., alcohol, drugs, nicotine, and food,
etc.) and process or behavioral addictions (e.g., gambling, food, religion,
and sexual addictions, etc.).
Similar to alcohol and substance
abuse disorders, process or behavioral addictions have personality factors
that tend to characterize their etiologies, behavioral manifestations,
and their resistance to change even though they do not involve a chemical
addictive substance. For example, although most people can gamble occasionally,
(e.g., Saturday night poker games, betting on major sporting events with
friends, and/ or playing a slot machine while on vacation, etc.), an estimated
six to ten million Americans lose control.
Pathological Gambling, according
to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth Edition
Text Revision (DSM-IV-TR, 2000) is characterized by recurrent and persistent
gambling behavior that disrupts family, personal, or vocational pursuits.
It also involves continuous or periodic loss of control; a preoccupation
with obtaining money for gambling; irrational behavior; and continuation
of this behavior in spite of adverse consequences (Rosenthal, 1992).
People also develop dependencies
on certain life-functioning activities that can be just as life threatening
as drug addiction and just as socially and psychologically damaging as
alcoholism. As noted previously 30.5% of American adults suffer from morbid
obesity or being 100 lbs. or more above ideal body weight. Some do suffer
from hormonal or metabolic disorders, but most obese individuals simply
consume more calories than they burn due to an out of control overeating
Food Addiction lifestyle pattern.
Hyper-obesity resulting from gross,
habitual overeating is considered to be more like the problems found in
those ingrained personality disorders that involve loss of control over
appetite of some kind (Orford, 1985). Binge-eating Disorder episodes are
characterized in part by a feeling that one cannot stop or control how
much or what one is eating (DSM-IV-TR, 2000).
Williams (1993) suggests that religious
addicts experience three of the same symptoms as other addicts: craving
or the need for a fix; the loss of control; and continual use. Johnson
and VanVonderen (1991) define Religious Addiction as “the state of being
dependent on a spiritually mood-altering system.” In a change intended
to encourage mental health professionals to view patients’ religious experience
more seriously, the DSM-IV included an entry entitled, “Religious or Spiritual
Problem” (Steinfels 1994). One type of psycho-religious problem involves
patients who intensify their adherence to religious practices to an obsessive-compulsive
and sometimes delusional mental state of mind. I personally had the unique
opportunity of writing my doctoral dissertation on religious addiction
entitled, “Hawaii and Christian Religious Addiction.” During that process,
I discovered a significant relationship between self-appointed, authoritarian
church leaders and religious addictive beliefs, behaviors and symptoms
(Slobodzien, 2004).
Likewise, Sexual Addiction affects
an estimated three to six percent of the U.S. population. Sexual addiction
takes many forms to include obsessions with pornography and masturbation
to engaging in cyber-sex, voyeurism, affairs, rape, incest, and sex with
strangers. Though solitary forms of this addiction may not be overtly risky,
they can be part of a pattern of distorted thinking and identity conflict
that can escalate to involve harming the self and others. An example of
a Sexual Disorder (NOS) or Not Otherwise Specified in the DSM-IV-TR, (2000)
includes: distress about a pattern of repeated sexual relationships involving
a succession of lovers who are experienced by an individual only as things
to be used. The defining elements of this kind of addiction are its secrecy
and escalating nature, often resulting in diminished judgment and self-control
(Carnes, 1994).
The fundamental nature of all addiction
is the addicts' experience of helplessness and powerlessness over an obsessive-compulsive
behavior, resulting in their lives becoming unmanageable. The addict may
be out of control. They may experience extreme emotional pain and shame.
They may repeatedly fail to control their behavior. They may suffer one
or more of the following consequences of an unmanageable lifestyle: a deterioration
of some or all supportive relationships; difficulties with work, financial
troubles; and physical, mental, and/ or emotional exhaustion which sometimes
leads to psychiatric problems and hospitalization. Addictions tend to arise
from the same backgrounds: families with co-dependency including multiple
addictions; lack of effective parenting; and other forms of physical, emotional
and sexual trauma in childhood. Since it is impossible to expect treatment
for one addiction to be beneficial when other addictions co-exist, the
initial therapeutic intervention for any addiction needs to include an
assessment for other addictions.
Poly-behavioral dependence is the
synergistically integrated chronic dependence on multiple physiologically
addictive substances and behaviors (e.g., using/ abusing substances – nicotine,
alcohol, & drugs, and/ or acting impulsively or obsessively compulsive
in regards to gambling, food binging, sex, and/ or religion, etc.) simultaneously.
For more info see: “Poly-Behavioral
Addictions and the Addictions Recovery Measurement System”
http://www.geocities.com/drslbdzn/Behavioral_Addictions.html
James Slobodzien, Psy.D., CSAC, is
a Hawaii licensed psychologist and certified substance abuse counselor
who earned his doctorate in Clinical Psychology. Dr. Slobodzien is credentialed
by the National Registry of Health Service Providers in Psychology. He
has over 20-years of mental health experience primarily working in the
fields of alcohol/ substance abuse and behavioral addictions in hospital,
prison, and court settings. He is an adjunct professor of Psychology and
also maintains a private practice as a mental health consultant.
For more info see: “Poly-Behavioral
Addictions and the Addictions Recovery Measurement System”
http://www.booklocker.com/books/1966.html
http://www.geocities.com/drslbdzn/Behavioral_Addictions.html
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