🐱 Gaming disorder is going to be named a mental health condition for the first time

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https://www.msn.com/en-ie/health/mi...ealth-condition-for-the-first-time/ar-BBH6lY2

Gaming disorder is soon to be classified as a mental health condition for the very first time, the New Scientist reports.

The International Classification of Diseases is a diagnostic manual that’s published by the World Health Organisation.

It was last updated 27 years ago, in 1990.

The eleventh edition of the manual is due to be published in 2018 and will include gaming disorder as a serious health condition to be monitored.

The wording of the gaming disorder hasn’t been revealed yet.

However, the draft outlines the criteria needed to determine whether someone can be classed as having a gaming disorder.

Vladimir Poznyak, a member of the WHO’s Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse, spoke about the importance of recognising gaming disorder as an important issue.

“Health professionals need to recognise that gaming disorder may have serious health consequences,” he said.

“Most people who play video games don’t have a disorder, just like most people who drink alcohol don’t have a disorder either. However, in certain circumstances overuse can lead to adverse effects.”

Last year, researchers from the University of Oxford’s Internet Institute undertook a study to investigate the percentage of gamers who are addicted to video games.

The study, published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, found that only 2 to 3 per cent of the 19,000 men and women surveyed from the UK, the US, Canada and Germany admitted that they experienced five or more of the symptoms from the American Psychiatric Association checklist of health symptoms.

A few years ago, the APA created a list of nine standard symptoms that could determine “internet gaming disorder”. These symptoms include anxiety, withdrawal symptoms and antisocial behaviour.

Dr Andrew Przybylski, lead author from the University of Oxford study, discussed their findings.

“To our knowledge, these are the first findings from a large-scale project to produce robust evidence on the potential new problem of ‘internet gaming disorder,’” he said.

“Contrary to what was predicted, the study did not find a clear link between potential addiction and negative effects on health; however, more research grounded in open and robust scientific practices is needed to learn if games are truly as addictive as many fear.”

While some may debate whether gaming does pose a threat to mental health, the amount of time many people spend playing video games is astounding.

When researchers from ESET polled 500 gamers, they discovered that 10 per cent admitted to spending between 12 and 24 hours glued to their video game screens.

“Gaming is highly addictive, and it is no wonder so many respondents from our study admit to playing them for so long,” said Mark James, a security specialist at ESET.
 
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Do I qualify?
 
Has Social Media addiction or Twitter addiction been added?

The screeching at people having more evidence for labelling them mentally ill would be great.

Them denying it would reinforce the addiction claim, which would also be great.

I'd think that addiction to social media is a more pressing issue. There are people like Wu who spend 100% of their waking hours on Twitter. People are glued to their phones 24/7. They're getting into autistic slap fights with strangers who don't like their opinions and spamming selfies in a grab for attention because they lack self confidence. I don't really think that people addicted to vidya can even hold a candle to the sheer number of social media drones who can't look away from their feeds long enough to hold an IRL conversation.
 
I ain't no psychiatrist but doesn't "addiction to video games" qualify more as a symptom and less of a disorder? Like all addictions, the people who do it are doing it to not think about/do something.
Isn't it dangerous to classify a symptom as a disorder and ignore the root cause?
 
The answer that first suggests itself is, so some asshole fresh out of grad school can set up a shingle and make a killing in this "specialty practice" that demands its own expensive training, textbooks, certification, etc. But will it really help people?
Well, it'll help the "specialists", so, yes?
 
I wonder if they will have sub-categories for this disorder.

What will they call hardcore twitch streamers, LPers, speedrunning autists, and e-sports fags?
 
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