Gambling "Gambling is defined as some valuable event with dangerous money or opportunities if the probability of winning or losing is not sure." [I] In the past decade, the attitudes of Ontario's gambling dramatically changed Did. Since the legalization of gambling in Ontario in 1994, the opportunities for public gambling have increased rapidly.
Problematic gambling (or Rudmania, often referred to as "gambling addiction" or "compulsive gambling") is an impetus to continually gamble despite harmful adverse effects and the desire to quit. The gambling problem is usually not a gambler's behavior, but depends on whether the gambler or someone else has been hurt. If gambler meets certain criteria, serious gambling may be diagnosed as clinical morbid gambling. Morbid gambling is a common illness related to social costs and family expenses.
Gambling addiction - Morbid gambling, also known as compulsive gambling or gambling disorder - is an impulsive control disorder. If you are a compulsive gambler, even if it adversely affects you or someone you love, you can not control the impulse to gamble. You gamble regardless of whether you are up, falling, bursting or rinsing and continue gambling regardless of the result. Of course, you can solve gambling problems without losing control altogether. Problem Gamble is every gamble that confuses your life. If you are gambling, spending more time and money, chasing a loss, or focusing on gambling, there is a gambling problem, despite having a serious impact on life.
The gambling problem usually means that even though gambling contains multiple symptoms, you only need at least 5 symptoms to be eligible for obsessive or pathological gambling. Violent gambling is a mandatory gambling subtype with problematic gambling, but it is limited to discrete periods. This is different from general gambling addiction. Even if you are not involved in gambling, it often happens that you continue to think about gambling.