Tag: child addiction

  • Child Gambling Soars to 50,000 In Two Years

    Child Gambling Soars to 50,000 In Two Years

    In the last two years, the number of people aged 11-16 with child gambling problems has quadrupled. Research from the Gambling Commission indicates that a further 70,000 children are at risk of developing problems relating to gambling.

    Currently, some 450,000 children bet regularly making this more commonplace than drinking alcohol, smoking and taking drugs.

    Vocal campaigner, the Right Reverend Alan Smith described this as a “generational scandal”.

    The watchdog warned that while most children were accessing gambling facilities via apps and online casinos, a large number were placing bets via more conventional methods.

    Gambling Commission executive director Tim Miller has urged society to “sit up and listen” writing:

    “While discussions about children gambling might conjure images of kids sneaking into bookies or sitting alone on their iPad, our latest research paints a more complex picture. The most common activities that children gamble on are not licensed casinos, bingo providers or bookies. Instead, we found children preferred to gamble in informal environments, out of sight of regulation. Many chose to gamble between friends whilst playing cards for money.”

    A recently conducted study found that the most common gambling routes were fruit machines in pubs/arcades and cash bets between friends. Some did admit to using betting shops and online gambling sites despite them not being the legal age to do so.

    Concerns were also raised that close to a million young people had been exposed to gambling through ‘loot boxes’ in video games. These involve the player purchasing an item that is not revealed until payment has been made, similar to lucky dips at fairgrounds.

    The study and subsequent report were based on Ipsos Mori of 2,865 11-16-year olds.

    The participants were asked 9 questions including how often they thought about gambling, if they used gambling to escape problems or when they felt bad and if they took money to use for gambling without permission. If they showed 4 or more problems, they were considered to be problem gamblers.

    The results suggested that over 1.5% were problem gamblers equating to 55,00 individuals-42,000 more than in 2016. It also suggested that 2.2%, some 70,000 were at risk of developing problems.

    The full PDF report can be read here.

     

    “We need to start taking the dangers of this seriously-55,000 children classed as problem gamblers is a generational scandal.” The Right Reverend Alan Smith

    Click  To Read: The Signs And Where To Find Support