Scholars’ open debate paper on the World Health Organization ICD-11 gaming disorder proposal
Article
Aarseth, E., Bean, A., Boonen, H., Colder Carras, M., Coulson, M., Das, D., Deleuze, J., Dunkels, E., Edman, J., Ferguson, C., Haagsma, M., Helmersson Bergmark, K., Hussain, Z., Jansz, J., Kardefelt-Winther, D., Kutner, L., Markey, P., Nielsen, R., Prause, N., Przybylski, A., Quandt, T., Schimmenti, A., Starcevic, V., Stutman, G., Van Looy, J. and Van Rooij, A. 2017. Scholars’ open debate paper on the World Health Organization ICD-11 gaming disorder proposal. Journal of Behavioral Addictions. 6 (3), pp. 267-270. https://doi.org/10.1556/2006.5.2016.088
Type | Article |
---|---|
Title | Scholars’ open debate paper on the World Health Organization ICD-11 gaming disorder proposal |
Authors | Aarseth, E., Bean, A., Boonen, H., Colder Carras, M., Coulson, M., Das, D., Deleuze, J., Dunkels, E., Edman, J., Ferguson, C., Haagsma, M., Helmersson Bergmark, K., Hussain, Z., Jansz, J., Kardefelt-Winther, D., Kutner, L., Markey, P., Nielsen, R., Prause, N., Przybylski, A., Quandt, T., Schimmenti, A., Starcevic, V., Stutman, G., Van Looy, J. and Van Rooij, A. |
Abstract | Concerns about problematic gaming behaviors deserve our full attention. However, we claim that it is far from clear that these problems can or should be attributed to a new disorder. The empirical basis for a Gaming Disorder proposal, such as in the new ICD-11, suffers from fundamental issues. Our main concerns are the low quality of the research base, the fact that the current operationalization leans too heavily on substance use and gambling criteria, and the lack of consensus on symptomatology and assessment of problematic gaming. The act of formalizing this disorder, even as a proposal, has negative medical, scientific, public-health, societal, and human rights fallout that should be considered. Of particular concern are moral panics around the harm of video gaming. They might result in premature application of diagnosis in the medical community and the treatment of abundant false-positive cases, especially for children and adolescents. Second, research will be locked into a confirmatory approach, rather than an exploration of the boundaries of normal versus pathological. Third, the healthy majority of gamers will be affected negatively. We expect that the premature inclusion of Gaming Disorder as a diagnosis in ICD-11 will cause significant stigma to the millions of children who play video games as a part of a normal, healthy life. At this point, suggesting formal diagnoses and categories is premature: the ICD-11 proposal for Gaming Disorder should be removed to avoid a waste of public health resources as well as to avoid causing harm to healthy video gamers around the world. |
Publisher | Akadémiai Kiadó |
Journal | Journal of Behavioral Addictions |
ISSN | 2062-5871 |
Publication dates | |
Online | 30 Dec 2016 |
Sep 2017 | |
Publication process dates | |
Deposited | 04 Apr 2018 |
Accepted | 12 Dec 2016 |
Output status | Published |
Publisher's version | |
Copyright Statement | © 2016 The Author(s). This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium for non-commercial purposes, provided the original author and source are credited. |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1556/2006.5.2016.088 |
Language | English |
https://repository.mdx.ac.uk/item/8762z
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