Free OHA PGS Webinar
How We Speak Matters
Language shapes perception. The words we choose when speaking to—or about—people experiencing gambling harm reflect how we view, value, and ultimately treat them. In gambling prevention, education, treatment, and recovery, language plays a powerful role in whether individuals feel seen, respected, and safe enough to seek help. Yet, outdated and stigmatizing vocabulary remains deeply rooted in clinical, community, and even casual conversations about gambling.
Terms like "addict," "degenerate gambler," "problem gambler," or "compulsive" language not only misrepresent what we now understand about gambling disorder—they reinforce shame, discourage people from coming forward, and create barriers to treatment.
Stigmatizing language impacts engagement in services, disrupts therapeutic rapport, and can contribute to isolation, internalized shame, and delayed access to support.
This webinar explores how shifting to person-first, trauma-informed, recovery-centered language supports resilience, dignity, and healing.
As we continue advancing patient-centered models of care, it becomes essential to intentionally replace outdated phrasing with language that reflects current clinical understanding, promotes hope, and strengthens recovery environments across prevention, treatment, documentation, and community dialogue.
Limited availability until 03/30/2026.
Webinar aired on 01/28/2026. Webinar recording will remain online until 03/30/2026 (60 days) for participants to watch and receive CE hours. The webinar will not be available after 03/30/2026.
This webinar is accredited by MHACBO for 1.5 continuing education (CE) hours.
A certificate of completion will be made available on the Student Dashboard upon webinar completion.
Open to all. Of special interest to mental health, addiction, and problem gambling treatment providers.
Whether you work in prevention, treatment, policy, research, or are simply curious about emerging gambling behaviors, this webinar provides timely insights into a rapidly evolving landscape.