![]() The International Journal of the Addictions, 28(14), 1497–1513.Ĭlarke, D., Abbott, M., DeSouza, R., & Bellringer, M. Beyond liver and culture: A review of theories and research in drinking among Chinese in North America. The International Journal of the Addictions, 28(12), 1209–1226.Ĭheung, Y. Approaches to ethnicity: Clearing roadblocks in the study of ethnicity and substance use. Hong Kong: Oxford University Press.Ĭheung, Y. Bond (Ed.), The psychology of the Chinese people (pp. Archives of General Psychiatry, 50(2), 125–133.Ĭheung, F. The Shatin community mental health survey in Hong Kong: II major findings. Health & Social Care in the Community, 8(3), 212–222.Ĭhen, C. The quality of life of women of Chinese origin. Gambling and the gambler: A review and preliminary findings. Control versus abstinence in the treatment of pathological gambling: A two to nine-year follow-up. International Journal of the Addictions, 24, 337–350.īlaszczynski, A., McConaghy, N., & Frankova, A. Anxiety and/or depression in the pathogenesis of addictive gambling. Psychological Reports, 62, 547–552.īlaszczynski, A., & McConaghy, N. SCL-90 assessed psychopathology in pathological gamblers. Journal of Gambling Studies, 14(4), 359–380.īlaszczynski, A., & McConaghy, N. Problem gambling within a Chinese speaking community. Australian and New Zealand Association of Psychiatry, Psychology and the Law Conference, Melbourne.īlaszczynski, A., Huynh, S., Dumlao, V. Workshop on the assessment and treatment of pathological gambling. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.īlaszczynski, A. Cross cultural psychology: Research and applications. Applied Psychology: An International Review, 46, 5–68.īerry, J. Immigration, acculturation, and adaptation. International Migration, 30, 69–85.īerry, J. Acculturation and adaptation in a new society. International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction, 4, 233–246.īerry, J. Suicide ideation and behaviour in people with pathological gambling attending a treatment service. The hot hand fallacy and the gambler’s fallacy: Two faces of subjective randomness? Memory & Cognition, 32(8), 1369–1378.īattersby, M., Tolchard, B., Scurrah, M., & Thomas, L. Montreal, Canada.Īyton, P., & Fischer, I. Symposium conducted at the 10th International Conference on Gambling and Risk-taking. Jacobs (Chair), Problem gambling among Asians in Canada and the U.S.A.: A new challenge for intervention. Working with Chinese problem gamblers: Integrating cultural diversities and treatment theories. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.). Washington, DC: Author.Īmerican Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (4th ed.). Journal of Psychiatric Research, 44, 331–337.Īmerican Psychiatric Association. The relationship of gambling to intimate partner violence and child maltreatment in a nationally representative sample. Journal of Gambling Studies, 8, 413–420.Īfifi, T. Commercial gambling and values in American society: The social construction of risk. Future research projects studying pathological gambling and ethnic minorities in the UK should seek greater understanding and improved management of this condition in a small but highly relevant population.Ībt, V., & McGurrin, M. Superstitious thinking is more prevalent in the Chinese culture and this can be manifested in individuals’ perceptions of fate and luck. The Chinese culture is associated with increased risk-taking behaviour. The collectivistic oriental culture may explain for intrafamilial development of gambling behaviour and this strong male authority in the traditional Chinese family set-up also reinforces this influence. The factors leading to development of problem gambling, which also carry distinctive cultural differences, include acculturation process among Chinese migrants to western countries, their social learning patterns in gambling, the patterns and motivation seen in Chinese gamblers, their gambling-related cognitive bias and distortions as well as barriers to their help-seeking behaviours. This narrative reviews papers on gambling and pathological gambling among the Chinese ethnic group in Western countries to provide a deeper understanding of the cultural and psychosocial factors and processes that lead to the development and maintenance of pathological gambling, gambling disorder, and problem gambling. A significant gap remains in the understanding of the psychosocial and cultural factors and processes in the development and maintenance of pathological gambling, gambling disorder, and problem gambling among the Chinese ethnic population living in the Western countries.
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