Self-Labelling, Causal Attributions and Perceived Stigma in People Negatively Affected by Gambling
Tyler McGinlay, Paul Delfabbro, Daniel King

TL;DR
This study explores how people with gambling problems use clinical labels and how stigma is influenced by their self-perception and attributions.
Contribution
The study reveals that clinical labels like 'addicted' are preferred over public health terms and that stigma is linked to problem severity but not to label use.
Findings
Participants rarely used public health terminology for gambling harm in self-description or when referring to others.
Clinical terms like 'addicted' were commonly used as self-labels, but only 'addicted' was used when referring to others.
Stigma was higher with more severe gambling problems but not independently linked to clinical label use.
Abstract
This study examined self-labelling, stigma and causal attributions in a sample of 300 people who had currently, or previously experienced, substantial gambling-related problems. Specific aims were to compare people’s use of more clinical labels with public health labels relating to gambling harm and to examine whether stigma was stronger in people who made more internal attributions and who adopted clinical labels. The results showed that people rarely adopted public health terminology relating to gambling harm either in self-description or when referring themselves to others. Clinical terms (addicted, problem, compulsive) were commonly endorsed as self-labels, but only ‘addicted’ was commonly used when referring to themselves to others. Stigma and clinical labelling were stronger when people had more severe gambling problems, but stigma did not independently predict clinical label use…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGambling Behavior and Treatments · Sexuality, Behavior, and Technology · Homelessness and Social Issues
