Gender differences in temporal relationships between gambling urge and cognitions in treatment-seeking adults

Psychiatry Res. 2018 Apr:262:282-289. doi: 10.1016/j.psychres.2018.02.028. Epub 2018 Feb 15.

Abstract

Many gambling-specific CBT programs seek to target either gambling-related urge or cognitions or both. However, little is known of the influence of one symptom type on another across time and whether these differ for men and women help-seeking problem gamblers. The aim of this study was threefold: to determine presence of measurement invariance for urge and cognition measures over time; to investigate the effect of baseline urge on end-of-treatment gambling-related cognitions - and the reciprocal relationship; and, identify whether these pathways differ across gender. Self-reported gambling urge (GUS), and gambling-related cognitions (GRCS) data from treatment-seeking problem gamblers prior to and post treatment (N = 223; 62% men) were analyzed with cross-lagged panel models, moderated by gender. Conceptualization of urge and cognitions were found to be temporally stable. There was no significant association between baseline GUS scores and post-treatment GRCS scores, nor the reverse relationship. Putatively, this infers that coexisting urge and gambling-related cognition components of problem gambling operate independently over time. Analyses revealed gambling urge had a significantly stronger tracking correlation across time for men than women when adjusting for cognition paths. This investigation provides early evidence for tailoring CBT in response to sub-population gambling-related characteristics, demonstrated across men and women.

Keywords: Cognitions; Cognitive-behavioral therapy; Gambling disorder; Gender; Moderating effects; Path analysis; Urge.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Cognition*
  • Craving
  • Female
  • Gambling / psychology*
  • Gambling / therapy
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Motivation*
  • Self Report
  • Sex Characteristics*
  • Sex Factors
  • Young Adult