That's why the community might be divided about helpline being helpful or not. It could be just the first line of defense, but I don't think that it will be enough to turn the addict to quit and chance their habits for the better. There should be follow/monitoring and physical help.
I think Help line is not even the first line of defense. How could a person who is sitting comfortably in an office waiting for someone to call them ans tell them they are addicted and ask their advice? More or less, they are a crisis support option.
This actually good , But the effect will probably be limited The reality is that only a small percentage of problem gamblers voluntarily seek help.
The worse case scenario is many will keep denying the fact that they are addicted to gambling , the first stage of conquering gambling addiction is to first admit that they are addicted gambling because many kept lying to themselves that they can stop any time , which is not actually true sometimes it takes the help of others to conquer gambling addiction.
True, so I think to be able to help a person who is about to get addicted, the institution should regularly study the casino's player data and look for people who have red flag of getting addicted to gambling and reach out to them. The institution should be the one to do the initiative if they are really concerned about gamblers.
Waiting in an office for someone to call them is like telling them to get addicted and just call them if you are already in trouble. This is not a preventive measure, this is a reactive intervention. So how can the title claim that this can help reduce gambling addiction? It can reduce the number of gambling addicts towards destruction, but not reduce people who are getting into gambling addiction.