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Cake day: March 10th, 2025

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  • Because you seem to lack the understanding that no one criteria is enough to diagnose addiction. And yes the preoccupation and duration of use are listed as criteria in both ICD-11 and the DSM-5. Just because there is no set number doesn’t mean they do not factor in to diagnosis. And again how it affects your health and life in generell are obviously also criteria by which addiction gets diagnosed. But saying duration and amount of use are not factors is not true.



  • Well if you’re honestly not trolling…

    I don’t have to think about what I’m saying because I know that this:

    “doctors have to base their diagnosis on “I want to stop but I can’t” and that’s all.”

    is not true.

    Do you seriously believe psychiatrists only have this one determining factor to decide if someone is addicted to something?

    The ICD-11, which is what is relevant where I’m from, states Gaming Addiction as a behavioral addiction for which one diagnostic criteria is preoccupation which is determined by how often you play games.

    To be fair the DSM-5(American Psychiatric Association) lists gaming addiction in it’s ‘more research needed’ section and hasn’t yet determined diagnostic criteria for gaming addiction specifically. But it does have the behavioral addiction of gambling, in which preoccupation is also one of these criteria.

    I don’t know what else to tell you other than that the information you have or where it comes from is simply not true, I’m sorry.





  • There are more than one criteria by which addiction gets defined. One of these absolutely is how often you do something. How it affects you is not the only criteria by which the medical community defines an addiction, albeit one of them.

    Heroin Addiction is different to Team Fortress addiction in the same way it is different to Cannabis addiction, they are all unique in how they affect you. The physical and psychological effects of cannabis addiction are going to be different to the ones of heroin and internet addiction.

    If they were only defined by how they affect you, like you argue, then every addiction would be a unique type of addiction, which is not how we define them

    Again at the core all addiction is psychogical. We don’t differenciate between them on basis of physical effects.