Therapist Wants In-Game Treatment for WoW Addicts

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
45,698
1
0
Therapist Wants In-Game Treatment for WoW Addicts


A U.K. psychiatrist wants to begin offering treatment to kids addicted to World of Warcraft [http://www.worldofwarcraft.com] from within the game itself.

Youngsters addicted to World of Warcraft get so caught up in it that they sometimes play as much as 16 hours a day, neglecting school, social activities and other aspects of their life not directly associated with the game. Yet those most affected by the game don't exhibit conventional warning signs, said psychiatrist Dr. Richard Graham, and as a result traditional approaches to intervention and treatment won't work.

The solution? Treat them from within the game. Graham wants to begin providing in-game therapy to WoW-addicted kids by the end of the year. "It's already clear that psychiatrists will have to stay within the parameters of the game. They certainly wouldn't be wandering around the game in white coats and would have to use the same characters available to other players," he said.

"Of course one problem we're going to have to overcome is that while a psychiatrist may excel in what they do in the real world, they're probably not going to be very good at playing World of Warcraft," he added. "We may have to work at that if we are going to get through to those who play this game for hours at end."

The doctor called on Blizzard [http://www.blizzard.com] to "waive or discount" fees for psychiatrists and therapists who play the game so they can "more easily communicate with at-risk players in their preferred environment." He also suggested that therapists might recruit existing players with a greater knowledge of the game to serve as "peer mentors," helping to identify addicted users and facilitate their decision to seek help.

"Those affected don't exhibit the same outward warning signs as most teenage anti-social behavior issues do because they're in their bedrooms most of the time, seemingly out of trouble," he said. "Because of this we can't get through to them in the traditional educational environment or intrude on their actual bedrooms. We need to turn to the internet itself to tackle these problems."

Source: The Daily Telegraph [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/news/5899659/Addiction-therapists-signing-up-to-World-of-Warcraft.html]


Permalink
 

Erana

New member
Feb 28, 2008
8,010
0
0
At first it sounds stupid, but all in all, I think it will work. It doesn't matter to Blizzard if they play a healthy amount or not, as long as they get PR and a supsrciption fee, of course.
 

Gunner_Guardian

New member
Jul 15, 2009
274
0
0
You know... this might just work..

One potential risk though, is psychiatrist being caught into the world as well.
 

GamerPhate

New member
Aug 22, 2008
621
0
0
Pretty much what Erana said. They get paid if you subscribe, it doesn't matter how much you play. If you are addicted though, you might subscribe longer.
 

nova18

New member
Feb 2, 2009
963
0
0
Gunner_Guardian said:
You know... this might just work..

One potential risk though, is psychiatrist being caught into the world as well.
You just know that all of the psychiatrists who join will get too addicted to help others.
They'll just end up riding some epic mount and calling everyone nubs.


How can they gauge who is addicted in-game though?
Whoever has Tier 5 gear?
 

Pandalisk

New member
Jan 25, 2009
3,248
0
0
"Now thats our therapy class on how to overcome your addiction over for the day, You better be back online tommoro for your next class"

And really, its not gonna work because there ethier gonna be tricked into being killed or people will run away from them, or have that creepy internet sex next to them
 

Warstratigier

New member
Mar 28, 2009
92
0
0
If anything they might as well try to educate them on ettiquette and open-minded thinking but if I were to take it seriously I would advise this...

...In nature, you simply cannot fix stupid.
 

Valiance

New member
Jan 14, 2009
3,823
0
0
I've actually already seen a kid who talked to a psychiatrist on the game.

Was a gnome mage if I recall...
 

Cpt_Oblivious

Not Dead Yet
Jan 7, 2009
6,933
0
0
The psychiatrist will probably play as a boss somewhere. He has no attacks, but he persaudes you to quit the game instead.
 

GoldenRaz

New member
Mar 21, 2009
905
0
0
I can't help but to think it's ironic that you'll ply the game to actually stop playing the game.

But it might work, as a kind of "multiple steps" thing, where the first step is going to a shrink in WoW, and then to eventually meet one IRL.
And then stop playing obsessively, of course.
 

El Poncho

Techno Hippy will eat your soul!
May 21, 2009
5,890
0
0
What if they become addicted to world of warcraft while leveling to a respectable level.
 

Blue Sonnet

New member
May 6, 2008
203
0
0
The question is whether the good publicity to be gained from showing willing by allowing psychiatrists online officially will outweigh the fact that most people being treated will have the ultimate aim of staying offline for good (addiction treatment tends to follow this unless you cannot avoid the addiction, i.e. shopping).

Another thing that could cause problems is whether the psychiatrists end up approaching players in the manner of a cold caller - without prior contact - to tout for business. You can guarantee at least one corrupt doctor approaching everyone who's more than an occasional player in order to get more patients and therefore more money. I can't imagine the publishers would take the time and effort to regulate every single user who registers as a psychiatrist...
 

VincentX3

New member
Jun 30, 2009
1,299
0
0
This will be the must EPIC fail in a "Get-your-ass-out-of-WoW" attempt ever.

Like anyone will listen to a online therapist, when he has 20 "friends" next to him waiting to go kill some mobs.
 

Rigs83

Elite Member
Feb 10, 2009
1,932
0
41
Warstratigier said:
If anything they might as well try to educate them on ettiquette and open-minded thinking but if I were to take it seriously I would advise this...

...In nature, you simply cannot fix stupid.
Wrong, nature fixes stupid all the time, it's called extinction.
 

Therumancer

Citation Needed
Nov 28, 2007
9,909
0
0
...

Well honestly I think WoW is no more immersive than any other form of escapism, it's just the newest form on computers. Kids retreat into computers when they have problems, the way the same kinds of kids have retreated into books and other media in the past. To a parent who has a problem with their kid's escapism it doesn't matter WHAT they are using, they are going to blame that media before they bother to look at what the kid is escaping from, or simply facing the reality that the world is a messed up place for some people, and nothing any set of parents can do is going to be able to change what winds up being wrong.

I mean frankly we had the whole contreversy over "Dungeons and Dragons Addiction" which spawned wonderful movies like "Mazes and Monsters". We had impassioned pleas against comic books before the Comics Code Authority went into force, and yes we've had monster and science fiction movies also attacked (with paticular success in Europe for a while with that "Video Nasties" list).

Later something else will come along.

I think the idea of special psychiatric treatment for WoW players is right along the lines of pet psychologists. Or the even more useless "gambling addiction help lines" advertised throughout casinos. Oh yeah, like those make a differance, it's not like anyone goes to use one BEFORE they lose their shirt, then it basically turns into an exercise in whining, and looking for sympathy.

At any rate, I think this whole idea is a cantidate for Ripley's "Believe It Or Not" I'd imagine a lot of people down the road will find it unbelievable to think such a thing was ever suggested. :)
 

Rigs83

Elite Member
Feb 10, 2009
1,932
0
41
It's better than how China tried to treat it
http://www.escapistmagazine.com/forums/read/7.124883
 

Undercover

New member
Jul 19, 2009
553
0
0
Fanusc101 said:
To be honest, I'd be a bit apprehensive about telling an orc my problems.
LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL

Whoo, I have tears in my eyes now.

Well done.