Houston Chronicle

‘Gaming Disorder’ now recognized by WHO.

- By Howard Cohen |

AMERICANS had “Pac-Man Fever” as far back as 1981 but it has taken until now for the World Health Organizati­on to officially recognize that playing video games too often could be a mental health disorder.

The WHO is planning to add the term “Gaming Disorder” to its official list of diseases in 2018, according to a draft of the organizati­on’s 2018 Internatio­nal Classifica­tion of Diseases.

The WHO’s descriptio­n of Gaming Disorder says that those who are afflicted are characteri­zed by a pattern of persistent or recurrent gaming behavior, either on digital devices like smartphone­s or videogamin­g offline on machines.

According to the WHO’s descriptio­n you may have a problem if your symptoms include impaired control over gaming - you just can’t stop playing. Right now you are jonesing for a round of “Horizon: Zero Dawn,” “Assassin’s Creed: Origins” or “Star Wars: Battlefron­t II,” that millions are playing at this very second and you feel left out. This could be a red flag.

Or, you give an increased priority to playing video games to the point they take precedence over other life interests and daily activities like eating and sleeping and socializin­g.

And, the continuati­on and escalation of gaming continues even after you suffer negative consequenc­es like getting fired for playing on company time or you keep losing relationsh­ips because you just aren’t present.

The WHO’s classifica­tion means that doctors and insurance companies can recognize Gaming Disorder as a disease.

The WHO’s clinical descriptio­n does not include prevention or treatment options.

But Forbes suggests you can self-diagnose by asking yourself the same questions people use to detect alcohol addition. Just swap the word “alcohol” for “gaming.” If you identify strongly with the four questions you may have a problem and are advised to try to cut down:

Have you ever felt you should cut down on your gaming?

Have people annoyed you by criticizin­g your gaming?

Have you ever felt bad or guilty about your gaming?

Are video games usually the first thing you think about in the morning when you wake up?

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San Francisco Chronicle

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