Gambling addiction affects more men and women, seduced by growing casino accessibility

The number of casinos  across the country is growing, not to mention online gambling, but programs to  combat gambling addiction have not kept pace. About 2 million adults meet the  criteria for ‘pathological gambling,’ according to estimates.
By      / U.S. NEWS AND  WORLD REPORT

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Gambling addiction affects both men and women from all socioeconomic classes,  according to figures from the National Council on Problem Gambling.

 

 

 

Before 2005, Sandra Adell had never set foot in a casino. But when a friend  of the then 59-year-old professor at the University of Wisconsin—Madison asked  Adell to accompany her to the Ho-Chunk casino about 45 minutes away from her  home, she obliged. As Adell walked through the casino floor, she thought to  herself, “Why in the world are all these people here?” She sat down at a  machine, and by the time she got up, she was hooked.

“I thought that the casino had become my personal ATM,” says Adell, author  of “Confessions of a Slot Machine Queen.” Early winnings convinced her the  casino was where she belonged. She quickly distanced herself from her social  circle, foregoing meals with friends and family to spend time gambling. “All I  wanted to do was play the slots,” she says; it was all she could think  about.

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