Gambling, drinking
>> Friday, June 16, 2017
BEHIND
THE SCENES
Alfred
P. Dizon
Take it from
controversial gambling operator Atong Ang: “You can’t win against gambling.”
Ang made this statement in a television interview following the Resorts World
Manila incident wherein a man addicted to gambling killed himself after setting
on fire the casino resulting to the death of 37 persons.
Many share
his view. You can’t really win at gambling. Because when you’re addicted, you
still lose even when you win, according to an expert from the Philippine
Psychiatric Association.
Psychiatrist
Ivanhoe Escartin said winning in gambling can get players hooked because of the
“pleasure” of winning, which they want to feel again. But even when losing,
gambling can become a compulsive habit because the players tend to try to
recoup their losses.
Police said
Jesse Carlos the gunman in the recent attack at RWM was a high-roller addicted
to gambling. The gunman, a former employee of the Department of Finance, was
buried in debt. He was dismissed from his job for misdeclaration of his
statements of assets, liabilities and net worth.
“Gambling
is addictive. It is an impulsive disorder that is hard to resist, so unless you
have full control of yourself, don’t start it. There are other better
things to do,” Escartin said.
“Whichever
way – winning or losing – you are at the losing end. That’s the direction
you are going and it can be hard to control until you become addicted,” he
added.
While the
rehabilitation of people addicted to tobacco and drugs requires both
detoxification and psychological counseling, stopping gambling addiction
primarily involves the latter.
“Gambling
addiction is complicated and it is personal. You get hooked on gambling
for various reasons like problems with the family, at work and many others. And
for you to change, behavioral change is required. Counseling is very
important,” Escartin said.
Family and
friends also play very important roles in the rehabilitation of gambling
addicts. “If you have a loved one addicted to gambling, you have to be patient
and understanding. They need your help. It is important also for them
to be connected to a community of, for instance, reformed gamblers because they
can relate to them,” he said.
****
Even
moderate drinking is linked to brain damage and a slight decline in mental
skills, according to a study released Wednesday that calls into question many
national alcohol guidelines.
Men and
women who consume 14-to-21 drinks a week over decades are two to three times
more likely than non-drinkers to show atrophy in the hippocampus, a part of the
brain that governs memory and the ability to keep one's bearings, said the
study, published in the medical journal BMJ.
They also
performed more poorly on a specific verbal test, though other language functions
appeared to remain unchanged.
A single
drink was defined as containing 10 millilitres (eight grammes) of pure alcohol
-- the equivalent of a large glass of wine, a pint of five-percent beer, or a
shot of spirits such as whisky or vodka.
An Agence France
Press article said last year, the British government revised its guidelines for
alcohol consumption, lowering the recommended maximum for men and women to 14
"units," or drinks, spread out over a week.
In other
countries, that threshold is set higher for men: 35 units in Spain, 24.5 in the
United States, 21 in Denmark and Ireland, and 19 in New Zealand.
For women,
however, guidelines for maximum weekly consumption in all of these nations,
except for Spain, is 14 drinks or less.
The
negative impact of heavy drinking on the brain is well documented, but research
on potential damage from "moderate" consumption -- up to now defined
as two or three drinks a day, on average -- has been scant and inconclusive.
To probe
further, researchers at the University of Oxford and University College London
combed through data on 550 men and women monitored during 30 years as part of
the so-called Whitehall II study.
Volunteers
reported periodically on their drinking habits, and scientists carried out
brain tests at regular intervals. None were alcoholics at the outset.
The effect
of 14-to-21 units of alcohol on the hippocampus was clearly shown by imaging
technology.
***
Mental
performance tests were less conclusive: only one measuring language fluency
showed a clear impact, while others showed no decline in brain function.
"Alcohol
consumption -- even at moderate levels -- is associated with adverse brain
outcomes," the researchers concluded.
The
findings "support the recent reduction in alcohol guidance in the United
Kingdom, and question the current limits recommended in the United
States," they wrote.
Nor did the
scientists uncover any "evidence of a protective effect of light drinking
over abstinence on brain structure or function," a tentative conclusion of
earlier research.
Because the
new study was observational and not experimental, no firm conclusions could be
drawn about cause and effect. The authors also acknowledged that the sample
size was small.
Outside
experts gave the study mixed reviews.
"It
shows evidence for 'hidden' damage to the brain," commented Paul Matthews
of Imperial College London, who highlighted the value of the advanced imaging
techniques used.
Jennifer
Wild, a senior researcher in clinical psychology at the University of Oxford,
said the results showed a "robust link" between what most people
would consider casual drinking and brain degeneration later in life.
Other
scientists expressed scepticism about some of the methodology, and the
self-reporting of alcohol consumption.
"Over
the 30-year period, weekly intake did not increase in the study
participants," noted Carl Heneghan, director of the Centre for
Evidence-Based Medicine at the University of Oxford.
This flies
in the face of a known pattern of increasing consumption through early adulthood,
and a gradual tapering off into older age, he pointed out.
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