Yang, Yung-Ning
Su, Jian-An
Pimsen, Apiradee
Chen, Jung-Sheng
Potenza, Marc N.
Pakpour, Amir H.
Chen, Ji-Kang
Poon, Wai Chuen
Nurmala, Ira
Ruckwongpatr, Kamolthip
Lin, Chung-Ying
Funding for this research was provided by:
The internal fund of E-Da Hospital (EDAHP108049)
The Connecticut Council on Problem Gambling and the NIH (D43 TW012262.)
Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan (MOST 110-2410-H-006-115, MOST 111-2410-H-006-100)
The Higher Education Sprout Project
The Ministry of Education (NCKU35)
Article History
Received: 11 June 2023
Accepted: 21 September 2023
First Online: 8 November 2023
Declarations
:
: All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional and/or national research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards. The present study has been approved by the ethics committee at The Human Research Ethics of National Cheng Kung University approved the study (NCKU HREC-E-110–486-2). All the participants have provided a written informed consent.
: The present study does not report any individual person’s data; therefore, there is no consent for publication.
: The authors declare no competing interests with respect to the content of this manuscript. Dr. Potenza has consulted for Opiant Therapeutics, Game Day Data, Baria-Tek, the Addiction Policy Forum, AXA and Idorsia Pharmaceuticals; been involved in a patent application with Yale University and Novartis; received research support from the Mohegan Sun Casino, Children and Screens and the Connecticut Council on Problem Gambling; consulted for legal and gambling entities on issues related to impulse control, internet use and addictions; has edited journals and journal sections; has given academic lectures in grand rounds, CME events and other clinical or scientific venues; and has generated books or book chapters for publishers of mental health texts. The other authors report no disclosures.