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A weak scientific basis for gaming disorder: Let us err on the side of caution

Authors :
van Rooij, Antonius J
Ferguson, Christopher J
Colder Carras, Michelle
Kardefelt-Winther, Daniel
Shi, Jing
Aarseth, Espen
Bean, Anthony M
Bergmark, Karin Helmersson
Brus, Anne
Coulson, Mark
Deleuze, Jory
Dullur, Pravin
Dunkels, Elza
Edman, Johan
Elson, Malte
Etchells, Peter J
Fiskaali, Anne
Granic, Isabela
Jansz, Jeroen
Karlsen, Faltin
Kaye, Linda K
Kirsh, Bonnie
Lieberoth, Andreas
Markey, Patrick
Mills, Kathryn L
Nielsen, Rune Kristian Lundedal
Orben, Amy
Poulsen, Arne
Prause, Nicole
Prax, Patrick
Quandt, Thorsten
Schimmenti, Adriano
Starcevic, Vladan
Stutman, Gabrielle
Turner, Nigel E
van Looy, Jan
Przybylski, Andrew K
van Rooij, Antonius J
Ferguson, Christopher J
Colder Carras, Michelle
Kardefelt-Winther, Daniel
Shi, Jing
Aarseth, Espen
Bean, Anthony M
Bergmark, Karin Helmersson
Brus, Anne
Coulson, Mark
Deleuze, Jory
Dullur, Pravin
Dunkels, Elza
Edman, Johan
Elson, Malte
Etchells, Peter J
Fiskaali, Anne
Granic, Isabela
Jansz, Jeroen
Karlsen, Faltin
Kaye, Linda K
Kirsh, Bonnie
Lieberoth, Andreas
Markey, Patrick
Mills, Kathryn L
Nielsen, Rune Kristian Lundedal
Orben, Amy
Poulsen, Arne
Prause, Nicole
Prax, Patrick
Quandt, Thorsten
Schimmenti, Adriano
Starcevic, Vladan
Stutman, Gabrielle
Turner, Nigel E
van Looy, Jan
Przybylski, Andrew K
Source :
Journal of Behavioral Addictions vol.7 (2018) date: 2018-03-01 nr.1 p.1-9 [ISSN 2062-5871]
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

We greatly appreciate the care and thought that is evident in the 10 commentaries that discuss our debate paper, the majority of which argued in favor of a formalized ICD-11 gaming disorder. We agree that there are some people whose play of video games is related to life problems. We believe that understanding this population and the nature and severity of the problems they experience should be a focus area for future research. However, moving from research construct to formal disorder requires a much stronger evidence base than we currently have. The burden of evidence and the clinical utility should be extremely high, because there is a genuine risk of abuse of diagnoses. We provide suggestions about the level of evidence that might be required: transparent and preregistered studies, a better demarcation of the subject area that includes a rationale for focusing on gaming particularly versus a more general behavioral addictions concept, the exploration of non-addiction approaches, and the unbiased exploration of clinical approaches that treat potentially underlying issues, such as depressive mood or social anxiety first. We acknowledge there could be benefits to formalizing gaming disorder, many of which were highlighted by colleagues in their commentaries, but we think they do not yet outweigh the wider societal and public health risks involved. Given the gravity of diagnostic classification and its wider societal impact, we urge our colleagues at the WHO to err on the side of caution for now and postpone the formalization.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of Behavioral Addictions vol.7 (2018) date: 2018-03-01 nr.1 p.1-9 [ISSN 2062-5871]
Notes :
DOI: 10.1556/2006.7.2018.19, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1259643475
Document Type :
Electronic Resource