Gaming Addictions; medical or just mental?

Discussion in 'Debate Corner' started by Angel, Aug 14, 2007.

Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.
  1. Angel Twilight Town Denizen

    Joined:
    Dec 26, 2006
    Location:
    Having sexytimez with my boyfriend at our house
    67
    282
    Its in the newspaper; its on the internet; and damn right its on television. Everywhere in Australia, people are debating whether gaming addiction can be classified as a mental health issue.

    --

    Video game addiction, also called video game overuse, is a proposed form of psychological addiction composed of a compulsive use of computer and video games, most notably massively multiplayer online role-playing games (MMORPGs), and related to the also-debated Internet addiction disorder, or even TV drama series addiction disorder. Instances have been reported in which users play compulsively, isolating themselves from social contact and focusing almost entirely on in-game achievements rather than life events.

    --

    In the United States, the question of video game addiction has occasioned much debate. The American Medical Association met in June of 2007 to discuss the topic, determining that further research was needed before video game addiction could be considered a formal diagnosis and urging the American Psychiatric Association to study whether the diagnosis would be appropriate for inclusion in the 2012 American Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Dr. Louis Kraus, a spokesman for the APA, told press in June of 2007 that behaviors mimicking addiction among game players may actually indicate other psychiatric problems, like social anxiety or depression. Michael Brody of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry indicated that though he did believe video games could be addicting, he did not necessarily believe the diagnosis warranted inclusion in the DSM. In its official statement on June 25, 2007, the APA said it "does not consider 'video game addiction' to be a mental disorder at this time," but it did not rule out the possibility that such a diagnosis could be confirmed by 2012.

    Should gaming addictions be classified as a medical problem?

    Have you been addicted to a game?

    --I have
    -Zelda, and im still addicted.
     
  2. .Kairi. Kingdom Keeper

    Joined:
    Mar 28, 2007
    Location:
    Too close to the guidos
    23
    814
    i would say its a mental problem. your brain starts to treat the computer like it would treat an addiction to cigarettes or alchohol.
     
  3. Inasuma "pumpkin"

    Joined:
    Sep 25, 2006
    Location:
    Indigo Plateau
    277
    I highly disbelieve it to be a medical issue.

    lol wtf?

    It's a game. Even if it IS online, there's no way you can be sick in the mind because of it. It's not like nicotine where you physically and mentally need it.

    And yes. I have been addicted to a game. Many games. Mostly megaman, Pokemon, Kingdom Hearts, Final Fantasy, and all those good games.
     
  4. Da Freak Twilight Town Denizen

    Joined:
    Oct 5, 2006
    Location:
    up your blarg
    22
    298
    I'm Da Freak and I'm.......... a gameaholic.
     
  5. Roxas is Hot I'd lick his Sea Salt stick anytime. ♥

    52
    Agreed.

    Being addicted to video games is 100% mental. Or somewhere close to that range.
     
  6. Repliku Chaser

    353
    Video game addiction is like any addiction, a mental situation. Some people are naturally more addicted to drugs, alcohol, gambling, video games etc. Some of these people are clinically shown to have Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. It can be alleviated but addicting personalities occur with anything. Some people are even addicted to shopping and food, exercise, watching tv, etc. They like to separate this stuff but in the end it just reflects the people who are this way found an obsession and have a hard time shaking it. Dealing with addictive personalities is rough but they can get better learning other ways to do things.
     
  7. Aurora Merlin's Housekeeper

    Joined:
    Jun 18, 2007
    Location:
    Central New York
    1
    19
    Sometimes I suspect certain members of the APA would like there to be more 'disorders' to research and provide therapy for. This is one of those times, and I'm glad they did not follow the same course of action as Korea and China or even the Smith & Jones Addiction Consultants in Amsterdam.

    Apparently in Korea and China, treatment can be forced on an individual by relatives or the government, and therapy often includes the same techniques used in mental institutions for other serious illnesses: administration of anti-depressants, yelling, or electro-shock therapy. In other countries the same 12 steps that Alcoholics Anonymous gave us are used to get 'addicts' to quit. And just like in addiction programs for alcohol, heroin, crack cocaine and other drugs, the old maxim still applies: Once an addict, always an addict. You can never be 'cured'. You will have urges to 'use' and will have to control your responses to these actions for the rest of your natural life.

    My contempt for the ineffectiveness of the 12 steps in treating any addiction aside, I feel that mental health practitioners are dancing on the edge of a very slippery slope. Instead of treating the root causes of obsession and addiction of any kind, they are choosing to focus on a trendy new money-making scheme designed to cater to the fears and control fantasies of an older generation that has not come to terms with the new medical and digital realities.

    In other words, they fear us and our ability to visualize and manipulate the possibilities of the so-called Digital Age the same way they feared HAL or Skynet out of science fiction. They think we are all agoraphobic troglodytes with acute social phobias leeching off of Mommy and Daddy and look down their noses at friends and lovers that we choose online as somehow being not real. They fear what they do not understand.

    So they institutionalize us, cut us off from games and gamer culture cold turkey, make us scream with group therapy, medications, and electro-shock seizures. And while our mouths are open, begging for the pain to stop, they stuff faith in a higher power down our throats until we choke to death and are 'born again' into a new life they are both capable of understanding and controlling down to the last detail.
     
  8. Zandyne King's Apprentice

    Joined:
    May 8, 2007
    Location:
    Where the sun is hella bright.
    24
    429
    I *personally* do not believe that gaming can be classified as being full-blown "disease of the mind". Look at the appeal that we get FROM games and we can draw our conclusions from there.

    Games appeal for:
    - Control (predictability and the comfort that it will not a have a "dramatic" effect on reality -such as killing something-)
    - Praise (games give you ratings....good ratings is like being praised...complete with a voice tell you sometimes)
    - Competition (like sports except in some cases without moving, exceptions to this being most Wii Games and things like DDR)
    - Intrigue/Simulation (expressions of fantasies FREELY, it caters to the needs we may or cannot satisfy in this sense)
    - Interaction (some games actually are much better story-tellers then say movies or books, standalones, not cheap money-milking schemes)

    However the media tends to do what it does best...propagate SPECIFICALLY SPECIAL truths. It is a statistic "truth" of sorts that EVERYTHING has at least ONE DANGER or NEGATIVITY. What the media usually skips out on in terms of rationalizing anything that is "compelling" is that MODERATION is KEY. (They often speak of gaming as though it is some sort of POISION of the mind.)

    What really sets gaming apart from say addiction to a drug, is that there are no physical withdrawl sytems (at least as far as I know of).

    Gaming really hasn't gotten to the degree that there should be this much attention on it, really it is simply an overexaggeration from a probably bored collection of people. If people had the same "gaming" addiction to other hobbies or activities of recreation (like reading, drawing or other such things) there would probably be even less alarm.

    (Ah well this is all I can think of at the moment...so tired.)
     
  9. Jube Formerly Chuck's

    Joined:
    May 6, 2007
    Gender:
    Male
    Location:
    Guess
    633
    Hello Da freak.


    Anywho its all mental Video games cant affect your health in anyway its just when you do nothing but play games all day your mind grows attached to it so its almost natural and you start thinking that you need it no matter what.
     
  10. Angel Twilight Town Denizen

    Joined:
    Dec 26, 2006
    Location:
    Having sexytimez with my boyfriend at our house
    67
    282
    In my opinion, it could possibly be a medical condition. Some people have their lives eaten away by games.
     
  11. Inasuma "pumpkin"

    Joined:
    Sep 25, 2006
    Location:
    Indigo Plateau
    277
    Well games don't physically cause ailments to you. I hardly would consider that medical.

    Games are the cause of things like starvation, dehydration and possible sleep deprivation. But that's different from a game causing you to grow warts.

    Just my take on the case. lol
     
  12. Aurora Merlin's Housekeeper

    Joined:
    Jun 18, 2007
    Location:
    Central New York
    1
    19
    If you could give us some examples or stories to back this statement up it might help your argument.
     
  13. Angel Twilight Town Denizen

    Joined:
    Dec 26, 2006
    Location:
    Having sexytimez with my boyfriend at our house
    67
    282
    WoW has had over 149 reports of people so obsessed with the game that they lost everything in their lives.

    There was an artical in the newspaper (which is what made me start this thread) about one guy, who spent every hour of his life on WoW except to eat, toilet breaks, and to sleep. He lost his girlfriend, He lost his job after forgetting about having to go after the long weekend, he lost contact with everyone except the virtual friends he had made in WoW.

    -In the end, his mother locked him out of his own house and drove him to a rehabilitation center.

    If I find the site for the paper; i'll show you what I mean.
     
  14. Inasuma "pumpkin"

    Joined:
    Sep 25, 2006
    Location:
    Indigo Plateau
    277
    Still. That's a very small number in a large online community of users.

    WoW racks in billions of dollars, out of billions of it's users. 149 is a lot, and it's a concern to those individuals, but IMO, most people would never take a game that seriously. Except my brother. Who is almost like the guy you're talking about. XD

    I still don't agree with the fact games can change people that much, and cause a medical problem.
     
  15. Soku Hollow Bastion Committee

    Joined:
    Feb 25, 2007
    Location:
    Heaven's Dawn
    67
    739
    That's so sad, but why do I want to laugh? Don't know, but no more VG for him. Next topic: People obsessed with Kh-Vids
     
  16. Inasuma "pumpkin"

    Joined:
    Sep 25, 2006
    Location:
    Indigo Plateau
    277
    Quite a saddening illness, KHV.

    But seriously. No. xD
     
  17. Angel Twilight Town Denizen

    Joined:
    Dec 26, 2006
    Location:
    Having sexytimez with my boyfriend at our house
    67
    282
    That would be me.

    I'm obsessed with kh-vids.

    lmao

    jks. ;p
     
  18. LikeNeverBefore Merlin's Housekeeper

    Joined:
    Jun 17, 2007
    Location:
    turn around im behind you! BOO ;;;
    2
    32
    lol I don't think that it's a mental health issue at all, some people just love gaming. But I think as along as you are not all over the computer every hour every day, it's not a problem if you are just on it a lot. I like gaming, and some times addicted, it's just like a hobby of mine. But if you play the game like your life depended on it, XD..then,,,,it will be a mental health issue, get a life!
     
  19. 11jones2 Traverse Town Homebody

    Joined:
    Nov 20, 2007
    Location:
    michigan
    4
    139
    like any addtions mental
     
  20. Darkandroid Gets it Together

    Joined:
    Sep 30, 2006
    Gender:
    Male
    Location:
    England
    240
    I've been through may gaming addictions, when a new game comes out I play it to death until I get bored. But that's as far as it goes. I don't let it take over my life. There are limits to what you can call an addiction and mental addiction.

    It's like with alcohol. You can drink it often and get drunk often but you won't necessarily be addicted and crave it.

    There are boundaries to which you can call it a mental problem. Casually playing games, more hardcore gamers (which people do get addicted to certain games) and then you get the full on addicts which you tend to get for long never-ending games like WoW and any mumorpuger (MMORPG) where some take it too literally. But also those who take games to seriously may already have a mental problem which lead to gaming addiction.

    Like Asperger syndrome which is a form of autism, and this is a social deficiency which leads to people being obsessed with a certain thing, while lacking in other areas. Normally the obsession varies, but for some they could become obsessed with games and nail everything down to a fine tune.
     
Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.