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The COVID-19 lockdown experience suggests that restricting the supply of gambling can reduce gambling problems: An Australian prospective study

Version 2 2024-06-19, 23:46
Version 1 2024-03-13, 01:22
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-19, 23:46 authored by Nerilee Hing, Alex MT Russell, Vijay Rawat, Gabrielle M Bryden, Matthew Browne, Matthew Rockloff, Hannah B Thorne, Philip Newall, Nicki DowlingNicki Dowling, Stephanie MerkourisStephanie Merkouris, Matthew Stevens
AbstractBackground and aimsCOVID-19 lockdowns limited access to gambling but simultaneously elevated psychosocial stressors. This study assessed the relative effects of these changes on gambling risk status during and after the Australian COVID-19 lockdown from late-March to late-May 2020.MethodsThe study administered three surveys to people who had gambled within the past year at T1. Wave 1 asked about before (T1, N = 2,125) and during lockdown (T2, N = 2,125). Subsequent surveys focused on one year (T3; N = 649) and two years after lockdown (T4, N = 458). The dependent variable was changes in reporting any problem gambling symptoms (PGSI 0 vs 1+). Bivariate analyses and multinomial logistic regression tested for significant associations with: demographics, psychosocial stressors (perceived stress, psychological distress, loneliness, health anxiety about COVID, financial hardship, stressful life events), gambling participation and gambling frequency.ResultsGambling participation and at-risk gambling decreased between T1 and T2, increased at T3, with little further change at T4. When gambling availability was curtailed, decreased gambling frequency on EGMs, casino games, sports betting or race betting, and lower psychosocial stress, were associated with transitions from at-risk to non-problem gambling. When gambling availability resumed, increased EGM gambling frequency, decreased online gambling frequency, and higher psychosocial stress were associated with transitions from non-problem to at-risk gambling.Discussion and conclusionsGambling availability appears a stronger influence on gambling problems, at the population level, than psychosocial risk factors. Reducing the supply of high-risk gambling products, particularly EGMs, is likely to reduce gambling harm.

History

Journal

Journal of Behavioral Addictions

Volume

13

Pagination

146-162

Location

Budapest, Hungary

ISSN

2062-5871

eISSN

2063-5303

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Akademiai Kiado

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