Literature DB >> 15147024

Comparisons between the South Oaks Gambling Screen and a DSM-IV-based interview in a community survey of problem gambling.

Brian J Cox1, Murray W Enns, Valerie Michaud.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To directly compare 2 forms of assessment for determining gambling problems in a community survey, and to examine the characteristics of respondents who endorsed DSM-IV symptoms but who scored below the formal DSM-IV diagnostic cut-off for pathological gambling.
METHOD: We interviewed 1489 Winnipeg adults by phone (response rate 70.5%) using th South Oaks Gambling Screen (SOGS), a DSM-IV-based instrument, and several gambling-related variables.
RESULTS: The lifetime prevalence of "probable pathological gambling" (according to the SOGS, having a score of > or = 5) was 2.6%. The SOGS items and DSM-IV symptoms were highly correlated (r = 0.80), but a score of 5 or more symptoms for a DSM-IV diagnosis produced lower prevalence figures. Comparisons between recreational gamblers (those with no DSM-IV symptoms), subthreshold pathological gamblers (those with 1 to 4 DSM-IV symptoms), and pathological gamblers (those with > or = 5 DSM-IV symptoms) on series of gambling-related variables (for example, high use of video lottery terminals) revealed that subthreshold individuals significantly differed from recreational gamblers and more closely approximated the characteristics displayed by pathological gamblers.
CONCLUSIONS: SOGS items show a high degree of association with the DSM-IV clinical symptoms of pathological gambling, but the DSM-IV cut-off of 5 symptoms is more conservative in defining gambling problems. Results support a continuum view of gambling problems in the community. DSM-IV scores of 3 or 4 represent the higher end of the group officially considered diagnostically "subthreshold" and may be important from both a clinical and public health perspective.

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15147024     DOI: 10.1177/070674370404900406

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can J Psychiatry        ISSN: 0706-7437            Impact factor:   4.356


  20 in total

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9.  Disordered gambling as defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders and the South Oaks Gambling Screen: evidence for a common etiologic structure.

Authors:  Wendy S Slutske; Gu Zhu; Madeline H Meier; Nicholas G Martin
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10.  Reliability, validity and classification accuracy of the South Oaks Gambling Screen in a Brazilian sample.

Authors:  Maria Paula Magalhães Tavares de Oliveira; Dartiu Xavier da Silveira; Simone Villas Boas de Carvalho; Silvia Teresa Collakis; Juliana Bizeto; Maria Teresa Araujo Silva
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