For Obsessive Compulsive Gamblers

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  1. #1

    Join Date
    Jan 2003
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    In the Lair of the Village Idiot's Apprenctice
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    3,385

    For Obsessive Compulsive Gamblers

    Yes folks its that time of the year once again, so break out those piggy banks, and head on down to the Leading Edge, to see who can lose the most amount of dosh in the least amount of time.
    You can start by contributing $150 to the HKJC coffers to allow you to lose the moola in style
    The fiddly details
    Wednesday 17th September 2003 @ 1830
    The Loge 5th Floor Leading Edge Happy Valley Racecourse
    Bookings by phone to the HKJC on 1817, payment by credit card.

    Windbag-Melbourne Cup of 1925


  2. #2

    Join Date
    Jan 2003
    Location
    In the Lair of the Village Idiot's Apprenctice
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    3,385

    yes pathological gamblers are welcome to attend

    I was under the impression that PGs were into soccer gambling, while OCGs were horse mad, but have been assured by a venerated PG that he will bet on anything that moves. So all PGs are most welcome to the betting frenzy on the 17th.

    ===from today's ULSCMP===
    http://hongkong.scmp.com/hknews/ZZZYHZ9RHJD.html

    Help centres for gamblers set to open next month


    ELAINE WU


    Two counselling centres for pathological gamblers are set to open next month - just two months after soccer betting was legalised.
    The pilot programme is part of a deal between the government and the Hong Kong Jockey Club to help curb gambling addiction.


    The Caritas Addictive Gamblers Counselling Centre, in Tsuen Wan, will serve the New Territories, and the Tung Wah Group's centre in Wan Chai will serve Kowloon and Hong Kong island residents.

    The Caritas Family Service and the Tung Wah Group of Hospitals won a tender to run the centres. They will each get $3.5 million a year from the government for three years.

    The Jockey Club has agreed to contribute annually to the Ping Wo Fund, which was set up to support the two centres and cover research on pathological gambling.

    The club will give $24 million to the fund in the first two years, and between $12 million and $15 million for each of the following three years.

    The Caritas centre's 10 staff will include social workers, clinical psychologists and counsellors. It will be open six days a week and will provide counselling, small treatment groups and relapse-prevention groups.

    Those with psychiatric symptoms, such as hallucinations, will be referred to Kwai Chung Hospital's substance-abuse unit.

    The Home Affairs Department is setting up a centralised hotline for the two centres. Caritas expects to receive 5,000 calls and 700 clients during the first year of operation. The Tung Wah centre expects to handle 5,000 calls and more than 500 cases a year.

    Meanwhile, the Education and Manpower Bureau's Hong Kong Education City will soon launch a two-year drive to inform students, teachers and parents on gambling-related issues.

    Anyone with queries on the two centres can call Caritas on 2402 4669 from October 1, or the Tung Wah Cares hotline on 2548 0010.

    [email protected]