Children with gambling problems – the next drug company target demographic

If your sixth-grader has been skipping school to hang out at the casino or the horse track, you might have waited too long to sit him down for a little talk about being impulsive.

In a new study from the University of Montreal, researchers selected 153 kindergartners and asked their teachers to rate severity of inattentiveness and impulsivity. Six years later, researchers interviewed each child to assess how often they bought lottery tickets or bet on sports, card games, video poker games, or bingo.

Before we go any further I’ve got to ask: What kind of a gamblers paradise is Canada? Seriously – middle-school children can buy lottery tickets, lay bingo bets, and play video poker games?

Results of the study showed that the more impulsive and inattentive the kindergartener, the greater the risk he’d be dancing the dance with Lady Luck before he turned 12.

Ah, but you know the fix is in. The lead researcher of the study told HealthDay News, “Often children don’t meet the criteria for ADHD, it doesn’t mean we should just overlook it. It means we need to spend more time to teach them how to stop, look and listen.” Riiiight. Teach them. Like the way we currently “teach” kids with ADHD to stop, look and listen.

Source:
“Impulsive Kindergartners May Turn to Gambling” Steven Reinberg, HealthDay News, 3/3/09, healthday.com


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Allan Spreen, M.D.
Dr. Allan Spreen, Chief Medical Advisor

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