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Eur J Public Health · Aug 2015
The extent and distribution of gambling harm in Finland as assessed by the Problem Gambling Severity Index.
- Susanna U Raisamo, Pia Mäkelä, Anne H Salonen, and Tomi P Lintonen.
- 1 Department of Alcohol, Drugs and Addiction, National Institute for Health and Welfare, Helsinki, Finland susanna.raisamo@thl.fi.
- Eur J Public Health. 2015 Aug 1; 25 (4): 716-22.
BackgroundPreventing gambling harm has become a policy priority in many European countries. Adverse consequences related to problem gambling are well known, but few studies have analyzed gambling-related harm in detail in general population samples. We determined the extent and distribution of gambling harm in Finland, as assessed by the Problem Gambling Severity Index (PGSI), and analyzed gambling involvement, demographics and their association with various types of harm.MethodsA nationwide telephone survey was conducted among 4484 Finns aged 15-74 years in 2011-12. Gambling-related harms were based on the nine-item PGSI. Gambling involvement was measured by gambling frequency and weekly average gambling expenditure. Associations among harms, demographics and gambling involvement were examined in logistic regression.ResultsDuring the previous year, 13% of respondents experienced at least one gambling-related harm (males 18.1%, females 7.2%). The four commonest harms were 'chasing losses' (8.6%), 'escalating gambling to maintain excitement' (3.1%), 'betting more than could afford to lose' (2.8%), and 'feeling guilty' (2.6%). The harm profile in descending order was the same for both genders but differed in prevalence. Young age (<25 years) was associated with increased likelihood of reporting harms. Both monthly and weekly gambling and spending over €21 per week on gambling were related to the harms.ConclusionsOur results provide support for the public health approach to gambling: harms were reported even at low gambling frequency-expenditure levels. In addition to the high-risk approach, adopting a population-level approach to preventing gambling harm could shift the population distribution of harm in a lower direction.© The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Public Health Association. All rights reserved.
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