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As online gambling booms in popularity, so do the number of and somethings seeking help for the compulsive need to wager in Pennsylvania.
More of the callers to a statewide helpline for people seeking assistance with problem gambling are age 18 to The younger generation appears to be more ready to seek help, said Josh Ercole, executive director of the nonprofit Council on Compulsive Gambling of Pennsylvania. Some counselors are almost exclusively working with younger folks who are experiencing problems with sports betting.
Overall, those calls have been rising since , but brought a plateau, according to annual helpline reports. Almost 2, people statewide called for assistance last year, according to numbers provided by Ercole.
But Ercole said this is to be expected for a few reasons. Typically, a plateau happens a few years after new types of gambling are legalized. Another reason the number of calls may have gone down is the increasing number of people reaching out for help through the text and chat lines. More than people used those lines to get support in FanDuel and Rivers Casino both declined to comment on these statistics.
DraftKings has not responded to requests for comment. Jody Bechtold, a Pittsburgh-based gambling addictions expert and CEO of The Better Institute , said younger people struggle to handle the issue of compulsive gambling. When someone contacts the statewide helpline, either through text, internet chat or a phone call, they speak with an operator who connects them with resources to address any issues that prompted the call.