Help-Seeking
Cross-source consensus on Help-Seeking from 1 sources and 4 claims.
1 sources · 4 claims
Uses
Evidence quality
Other
Other
Highlighted claims
- Participants with higher PGSI scores were more likely to report past or current gambling problems, self-exclusion requests, and use of gambling-problem resources. — Gambling and the COVID-19 pandemic in the province of Quebec (Canada): results from an online cross-sectional survey of people who had gambled within the last 12 months
- The most common help resources included addiction workers, helplines, self-help groups, psychologists, social entourage, and family doctors. — Gambling and the COVID-19 pandemic in the province of Quebec (Canada): results from an online cross-sectional survey of people who had gambled within the last 12 months
- Help-seeking remained limited compared with the number of high-risk gamblers. — Gambling and the COVID-19 pandemic in the province of Quebec (Canada): results from an online cross-sectional survey of people who had gambled within the last 12 months
- Barriers to gambling help-seeking may include shame, denial, social factors, limited service access, health-risk concerns, lockdown self-reliance, and mental healthcare disruption. — Gambling and the COVID-19 pandemic in the province of Quebec (Canada): results from an online cross-sectional survey of people who had gambled within the last 12 months