Gambling, Polarization, and Trust: Delivering Care in a Partisan Landscape

July 22, 20269:00am - 12:00pm
Gambling, Polarization, and Trust: Delivering Care in a Partisan Landscape

This presentation examines how political polarization critically shapes gambling harm by eroding trust in mental health services and deepening cultural divides around help-seeking. The session highlights how polarization-driven resistance to care differentially affects communities of color, politically diverse and religious communities, neurodiverse individuals, and older adults. We emphasize shame as a central driver of secrecy, impulsiveness, and treatment avoidance. We also explore how rapid online gambling formats accelerate risk and intensify shame, delaying treatment. Participants will learn hands-on communication skills and intervention strategies that can be immediately applied to bridge political divides, build trust across differences, and reach underserved populations.

Learning Objectives

  • Examine how political polarization and moral narratives shape gambling stigma, erode trust in care systems, and influence when, how, and whether to seek help.
  • Practice hands-on strategies to reduce shame, rebuild trust, and adapt gambling prevention and treatment approaches for diverse populations within polarized communities.

Speaker

Session Track

  • Foundations & Emerging Insights