Gambling Therapists in Manitoba

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Frequently Asked Questions About Gambling

What is gambling disorder?

Gambling disorder is a recognized mental health condition characterized by persistent and recurrent problematic gambling behaviour that causes significant distress or impairment — including preoccupation with gambling, needing to gamble with increasing amounts of money to achieve the same excitement, repeated unsuccessful efforts to cut back, and continuing to gamble despite serious financial, relational, or occupational consequences. It affects approximately 1–3% of the Canadian population and is classified as a behavioural addiction with neurobiological similarities to substance use disorders.

Is gambling disorder similar to substance addiction?

Yes, in important ways. Gambling disorder is classified alongside substance use disorders in the DSM-5 as the only behavioural addiction with sufficient evidence of shared neurobiological mechanisms — both involve dopamine-driven reward pathways, tolerance-like phenomena (needing more to achieve the same effect), withdrawal-like states when stopping, and strong cravings. This means approaches that work for substance use disorders, particularly CBT and motivational interviewing, are also effective for gambling disorder.

What therapy approaches are most effective for gambling disorder?

Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) has the strongest evidence for gambling disorder — specifically addressing the cognitive distortions common in gambling (the gambler's fallacy, illusions of control, superstitious thinking) and developing alternative coping strategies. Motivational Interviewing helps build motivation for change when ambivalence is present. Brief interventions are often effective for less severe cases; self-exclusion programs (banning yourself from casinos) can support the early stages of change. Gamblers Anonymous provides ongoing peer support.

How do I know if I or someone I love has a gambling problem?

Signs of problematic gambling include gambling with money needed for essentials, lying about gambling or hiding it from others, borrowing money to gamble, feeling unable to stop once started, chasing losses (continuing to gamble to try to win back money lost), feeling irritable or restless when not gambling, and continuing to gamble despite serious consequences. Gambling problems exist on a spectrum — not everyone who has difficulties with gambling meets criteria for gambling disorder, but all levels of severity respond to appropriate support.

What support is available for family members affected by gambling?

Gambling disorder profoundly affects the entire family — financial devastation, broken trust, and emotional turmoil are common. Gam-Anon is a 12-step support group specifically for family members of people with gambling problems. Individual therapy helps family members process the impact, navigate the relationship, set appropriate limits, and make decisions about their own wellbeing regardless of whether the gambler seeks help. In Canada, provincial problem gambling helplines also provide support for families.