Growing Number of Women Hooked on Gambling

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t3a

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By BRAD CAIN, Associated Press Writer

SALEM, Ore. - Maryann started gambling 10 years ago, playing video poker machines in hotel restaurants in Oregon as she traveled for her job.
"It got so any place I would see a lottery sign and that was a restaurant or other place that was comfortable, I would play," says the woman, who is in her 40s.

She figures she lost $60,000 on video poker before admitting she had a problem and enrolling in a gambling-addiction treatment program.
Maryann, who doesn't want her last name used, is among a growing number of women across the nation who are getting hooked on gambling.

A state agency that tracks gambling addiction says compulsive female gamblers in Oregon outnumber compulsive male gamblers 32,000 to 29,000, an estimate based on results of a statewide survey.


Nationwide, men make up two-thirds of problem gamblers. But that may be changing in states where video gambling is no further away than a corner deli or tavern.
Video gambling machines have particular appeal to women, said Rachel Volberg, a Massachusetts researcher who has conducted studies of problem gambling.


"The games are a lot less intimidating for women to play," Volberg said. "You don't have to sit at a card table and have men making jokes about 'the little woman learning how to gamble.'"
Oregon is one of nine states that allow games such as video poker and electronic keno in bars, taverns and other retail outlets apart from casinos.


The National Council on Problem Gambling says there's been an uptick in compulsive gambling by women in those states with widespread "convenience" gambling.
"As electronic gaming devices spread throughout the country, we are seeing greater numbers of women with gambling problems," said Keith Whyte, executive director of the Washington-based group.


Part of the reason for that is that the games often are located in brightly lit, attractive places such as coffee shops, delis and bowling alleys — not just in smoke-filled bars and taverns, Whyte said.
"Women feel comfortable in these places," he said.


Few states with widely available video gambling have conducted studies to track rates of compulsive gambling among women, Volberg said.
But officials in several of those states said there's no doubt that a "feminization" of gambling is taking place.


"It's an opportunity to escape. Women tell us they go into a 'zone,' and that they are kind of mesmerized by the games," said Cindy Black, a spokeswoman for the state-run gambling addiction program in West Virginia, which has lottery-sponsored video poker games.


Donna Johnson, head of the Montana Council on Problem Gambling, said equal numbers of men and women are calling the council's telephone hot line seeking help for gambling addictions.

It used to be mostly men who called, Johnson said, "but gambling isn't just for the boys anymore. We're seeing more and more women coming into treatment programs."

In Louisiana, where there are 10,000 video gambling terminals at 3,000 locations statewide, 57 percent of the calls to that state's gambling addiction hot line are from women.

"The video machines are everywhere," says Reece Middleton of the Louisiana Association on Compulsive Gambling. "It's no wonder we've got women in trouble."

There are nine tribal casinos in Oregon, but you don't have to go to a casino to gamble. You can do it at bowling alleys, neighborhood delis or restaurants, bars or taverns. Retail establishments must have a liquor license to have video poker, and each outlet is allowed to have up to six video terminals.

In all, there are 10,300 state-owned video gambling machines scattered across the state. They have been installed in 2,000 retail establishments — about 38 percent of the state's retail establishments with liquor licenses.

Most Oregonians play video poker and the slots without getting addicted. The state estimates that about 2.4 percent of adult Oregonians who gamble are either addicted to it or prone to addiction.

Still, the number of gamblers in state addiction-treatment programs grows about 15 percent a year, state officials say.

A gambling addiction can break up marriages, destroy careers and send a gambler into bankruptcy. An example is Michelle, who also didn't want her last name used and is also in a treatment program.

Michelle first got hooked on video gambling playing the slots at a casino, then fed her addiction by spending hour after hour at video poker terminals in retail outlets closer to her home.

"I've spent thousands of dollars on video poker, and it's devastated me emotionally and financially," she says.

Gambling addiction officials believe Oregon may soon see more women with gambling problems.

The Oregon Lottery on July 1 will begin offering video slot machines, also known as line games, a move that's expected to raise around $120 million in additional lottery profits for the state's two-year budget.

"I think it's safe to assume that women will make up at least 50 percent of the problem gamblers that will develop from the addition of line games," says Jeffrey Marotta, a clinical psychologist who manages problem gambling services for the state Department of Human Services.

Marotta is forecasting that the introduction of slot machines will create another 8,000 problem gamblers, and he is urging the Legislature to provide at least $9 million for gambling addiction treatment programs in the coming two years. The current spending is $5.6 million.

Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski, who ordered the move to video slot games, also is urging the Legislature to spend more money on gambling-addiction treatment to handle the expected increase in caseload.

Those programs have helped Maryann deal with her problem, although she says she isn't "cured."

"I can't say never again," the Salem woman says. "I'm a compulsive gambler and I'm always just one bet away" from relapsing.
 
Roxygurl

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t3a said:
By BRAD CAIN, Associated Press Writer

SALEM, Ore. - Maryann started gambling 10 years ago, playing video poker machines in hotel restaurants in Oregon as she traveled for her job.
"It got so any place I would see a lottery sign and that was a restaurant or other place that was comfortable, I would play," says the woman, who is in her 40s.

She figures she lost $60,000 on video poker before admitting she had a problem and enrolling in a gambling-addiction treatment program.
Maryann, who doesn't want her last name used, is among a growing number of women across the nation who are getting hooked on gambling.

A state agency that tracks gambling addiction says compulsive female gamblers in Oregon outnumber compulsive male gamblers 32,000 to 29,000, an estimate based on results of a statewide survey.


Nationwide, men make up two-thirds of problem gamblers. But that may be changing in states where video gambling is no further away than a corner deli or tavern.
Video gambling machines have particular appeal to women, said Rachel Volberg, a Massachusetts researcher who has conducted studies of problem gambling.


"The games are a lot less intimidating for women to play," Volberg said. "You don't have to sit at a card table and have men making jokes about 'the little woman learning how to gamble.'"
Oregon is one of nine states that allow games such as video poker and electronic keno in bars, taverns and other retail outlets apart from casinos.


The National Council on Problem Gambling says there's been an uptick in compulsive gambling by women in those states with widespread "convenience" gambling.
"As electronic gaming devices spread throughout the country, we are seeing greater numbers of women with gambling problems," said Keith Whyte, executive director of the Washington-based group.


Part of the reason for that is that the games often are located in brightly lit, attractive places such as coffee shops, delis and bowling alleys — not just in smoke-filled bars and taverns, Whyte said.
"Women feel comfortable in these places," he said.


Few states with widely available video gambling have conducted studies to track rates of compulsive gambling among women, Volberg said.
But officials in several of those states said there's no doubt that a "feminization" of gambling is taking place.


"It's an opportunity to escape. Women tell us they go into a 'zone,' and that they are kind of mesmerized by the games," said Cindy Black, a spokeswoman for the state-run gambling addiction program in West Virginia, which has lottery-sponsored video poker games.


Donna Johnson, head of the Montana Council on Problem Gambling, said equal numbers of men and women are calling the council's telephone hot line seeking help for gambling addictions.

It used to be mostly men who called, Johnson said, "but gambling isn't just for the boys anymore. We're seeing more and more women coming into treatment programs."

In Louisiana, where there are 10,000 video gambling terminals at 3,000 locations statewide, 57 percent of the calls to that state's gambling addiction hot line are from women.

"The video machines are everywhere," says Reece Middleton of the Louisiana Association on Compulsive Gambling. "It's no wonder we've got women in trouble."

There are nine tribal casinos in Oregon, but you don't have to go to a casino to gamble. You can do it at bowling alleys, neighborhood delis or restaurants, bars or taverns. Retail establishments must have a liquor license to have video poker, and each outlet is allowed to have up to six video terminals.

In all, there are 10,300 state-owned video gambling machines scattered across the state. They have been installed in 2,000 retail establishments — about 38 percent of the state's retail establishments with liquor licenses.

Most Oregonians play video poker and the slots without getting addicted. The state estimates that about 2.4 percent of adult Oregonians who gamble are either addicted to it or prone to addiction.

Still, the number of gamblers in state addiction-treatment programs grows about 15 percent a year, state officials say.

A gambling addiction can break up marriages, destroy careers and send a gambler into bankruptcy. An example is Michelle, who also didn't want her last name used and is also in a treatment program.

Michelle first got hooked on video gambling playing the slots at a casino, then fed her addiction by spending hour after hour at video poker terminals in retail outlets closer to her home.

"I've spent thousands of dollars on video poker, and it's devastated me emotionally and financially," she says.

Gambling addiction officials believe Oregon may soon see more women with gambling problems.

The Oregon Lottery on July 1 will begin offering video slot machines, also known as line games, a move that's expected to raise around $120 million in additional lottery profits for the state's two-year budget.

"I think it's safe to assume that women will make up at least 50 percent of the problem gamblers that will develop from the addition of line games," says Jeffrey Marotta, a clinical psychologist who manages problem gambling services for the state Department of Human Services.

Marotta is forecasting that the introduction of slot machines will create another 8,000 problem gamblers, and he is urging the Legislature to provide at least $9 million for gambling addiction treatment programs in the coming two years. The current spending is $5.6 million.

Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski, who ordered the move to video slot games, also is urging the Legislature to spend more money on gambling-addiction treatment to handle the expected increase in caseload.

Those programs have helped Maryann deal with her problem, although she says she isn't "cured."

"I can't say never again," the Salem woman says. "I'm a compulsive gambler and I'm always just one bet away" from relapsing.
interesting.i think if one can become addicted to gambling then its a weakness thats uncontrolled. those types also are easily addicted to drugs,sex,and achohol.i have no such addiction and never have. i have no desire to pull over to gamble at a poker machine or anything else. i cant imagine being a slave to such temptations.tho i had a friend in my younger days experimenting with cocaine. we thought it was great. but after a couple months we decided it was too costly in many ways. we stopped. 2 weeks later the "contact" we were going thru came to my home to ask me to stop my friend who had become out of control and was banging on this guys bedroom window at 3am with his family at home demanding more coke. at that point she was lost to any help and for the 1st time i realized the power of addiction.she lost her relationships,her family and her job. she left town to go to colorado i heard. all in 3 weeks.if gambling were available to us im sure she would have turned to that to support her drug addiction.~RG
 

THE SHRINK

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Good post rg...

It wouldn't shock you then if I told you that I believe the MAJORITY of posters are addicted to gambling. If you doubt me, just take a look at how many people have registered to this forum and how many are left still posting. The turnover rate is mind boggling and there are so few who have been posting here for 5 years or longer...

I know there are lots of reason people stop posting but the number 1 reason is loss of bankroll...

THE SHRINK
 
t3a

t3a

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d'oh

wil - I have never looked there before. Geez, this site has everything
 
Roxygurl

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THE SHRINK said:
Good post rg...

It wouldn't shock you then if I told you that I believe the MAJORITY of posters are addicted to gambling. If you doubt me, just take a look at how many people have registered to this forum and how many are left still posting. The turnover rate is mind boggling and there are so few who have been posting here for 5 years or longer...

I know there are lots of reason people stop posting but the number 1 reason is loss of bankroll...

THE SHRINK
i'll admit i was here a year ago and took heavy losses following posters who werent in it to win it. people whos only reason for posting plays was to entertain themselves and watch others follow thier lame picks for the thrill of it. it drove me away. your right loss of bankroll did it for me. i stayed away for a year.honestly shrink the rx is an addiction.a good one. the subjects and incredibly good threads are reason enough to come here daily betting or not. how many posters in the political forum gamble? ive seen a few but the most prominent posters stay in that forum. for them posting thier opinions on the happenings around the world is thier addiction.being read by hundreds is thier rush.i cant relate to an addiction because i have none.i get no rush from anything i post because it presents opportunity to rip me apart and that terrifies me. but im fascinated with the art and science that sports handicapping is. betting to have action isnt healthy. betting on a team youve done carefull homework on is smart betting.and the thoughts i read from more experienced guys here is valued beyond words.ive become better in the 2 years ive been here.everyone has a mentor or someone they got great tips from and the rx is the best mentor because its here when you want to laugh,or seek info,need help or need just a friend.if the rx is full of people whos got a gambling addiction this is the best place they can come to be kept from total destruction.the thread started by the young guy last night is a great example.he honestly wanted to know if he was in trouble and needed help. i think it was fish who offered his email address so the kid could get in touch and talk it over. that thread and the replys he got may have saved his life.if others recognize thier own addiction from that thread then how many other lives may have been saved?its dramatic but very real. im not fully aware of the history of the rx shrink but i believe you created it.think of the lives you have touched in that time.directly and indirectly.i think im a bit too opinionated and i go on too much but i want you to know this place is a treasure.~RG
 

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