#Nassau, March 5, 2019 – Bahamas – Problem gambling has become a significant public health issue in The Bahamas, Minister of Health Dr. the Hon. Duane Sands said Monday. The Health Minister said the same is true “in other territories around the world”.
Addressing a Problem Gambling and Addiction
Awareness Month Seminar hosted by the Public Hospitals Authority and Sandilands
Rehabilitation Centre (SRC), in conjunction with the Bahamas Gaming Operators
Association, Monday, March 4, Dr. Sands said according to anecdotal data, many
Bahamian families are being impacted by the effects of problem gambling.
“For these persons, gaming or gambling has moved
from an entertainment pastime to a full-fledged compulsive obsession,” Dr.
Sands said.
The Health Minister said the American Psychiatric
Association has classified problem gambling as an official disorder in the
fifth edition of its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (The DSM5).
This psychiatric/medical designation, Dr. Sands
said, might suggest that problem gambling shares similar hallucinogenic
characteristics with substance abuse disorders such as cocaine and heroin
abuse.
The Health Minister said recognizing the
significance of the problem, the Government of The Bahamas has committed to
ensuring that individuals in The Bahamas impacted by problem gambling, get the
necessary help and assistance in order to make wise and responsible choices,
while also receiving the assistance needed to overcome their gambling
addiction.
Additionally, healthcare officials are working to
integrate gambling addiction services into the existing Substance Abuse
Programme at Sandilands Rehabilitation Centre and other healthcare services
programmes in public and private institutions throughout the country.
“Our twin goals as policymakers with respect to
Games of Chance then, would be to educate those most affected by potential
problem gaming and to empower them and the public at-large, with information to
enable them to make wise choices about gaming and to recognize potential
problem gambling in others,” Dr. Sands said.
“Additionally we are working to integrate gambling
addiction services into the present, existing substance abuse programme at
Sandilands Rehabilitation Centre and other healthcare services programmes in
public and private institutions throughout the country.
“And so while I applaud responsible gaming partners
such as The Bahamas Gaming Board and The Bahamas Gaming Operators Association
for their efforts in educating the public on gaming or gambling responsibly, it
is critical; it is essential that the public and private healthcare systems as
well as other stakeholders do more to come to the aid of those suffering from
this affliction.”
Dr. Sands said the Government is supporting efforts
to foster greater public/private sector partnerships to meet the public health,
and wellness challenges facing its citizens, including the matter of problem
gambling.
“Through these partnerships, we seek to support the
reduction of stigma that is associated with problem and pathological gambling
disorders; we seek to raise the level of awareness by employers, community
organizations and families as to the acute and chronic issues surrounding
gambling addiction, and we also believe that we should be developing training
and Train-the-Trainer programmes for Counsellors, Educators, Allied Health
Professionals, Clinicians and Human Resource Professionals to both recognize
and to provide support in order to treat individuals facing gambling disorders.
“A keen observer of Games of Chance, Hunter S.
Thompson once noted: ‘There are many harsh lessons to be learned from the
gambling experience, but the harshest one of all, is the difference between
having fun and being smart.”
Dr. Sands said officials at the Ministry of Health
are “keenly interested” in evidence-based best practices, gleaned from other
jurisdictions worldwide, to create a model of care that works in the local
context.
“In charting a course for treatment and recovery of problem gambling in The Bahamas, one such evidence-based practice worthy of examination by all stakeholders is the establishment of a jurisdictional Council on Problem Gambling for The Bahamas. International Councils, or their comparable bodies, already exist throughout the world, having strategic responsibility for problem gambling awareness, prevention, treatment and recovery, research, along with policy development, designed to impact persons and their families affected by problem gambling.
“I applaud the organizers of today’s forum, led by The Sandilands Rehabilitation Centre Gambling Addiction Awareness Programme, for their vision and commitment in charting a course for assisting persons affected by problem gambling and addiction. I trust that the information gleaned from this month’s initiatives, sets the stage for collaboration and policy formation to aid in the development of a sustainable framework for addressing the emerging health care issue of problem gambling.
“It is abundantly clear that this forum is the
right approach to chart a sustainable course with meaningful resources, inclusive
of a functional administrative and clinical team. It is not lost on me
that this will require a substantive perpetual budget if we truly are to
address the issue of problem gambling and those affected by this phenomenon,”
Dr. Sands added.
By: Matt Maura
Release: BIS
Photo Caption: Minister of Health Dr. the Hon. Duane Sands addressing the Opening Session of the Problem Gambling and Addiction Awareness Month Seminar hosted by the Public Hospitals Authority and Sandilands Rehabilitation Centre in conjunction with The Bahamas Gaming Operators Association.
(BIS Photo/Kristaan Ingraham)