| Literature DB >> 25879923 |
Sari Castrén1,2, Marjut Grainger3, Tuuli Lahti4,5, Hannu Alho6,7, Anne H Salonen8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adolescent gambling and substance use are viewed as a public health concern internationally. The early onset age of gambling is a known risk factor for developing gambling problems later in life. The aims of this study are: to evaluate the internal consistency reliability, factorial validity and classification accuracy of the Finnish version of DSM-IV-Multiple Response-Juvenile (DSM-IV-MR-J) criteria measuring at-risk/problem gambling (ARPG); to examine gender differences in gambling participation, ARPG and substance use among first-year junior high school students; and to investigate the association of gambling and gaming (video game playing) participation, substance use and social variables with ARPG.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25879923 PMCID: PMC4381398 DOI: 10.1186/s13011-015-0003-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy ISSN: 1747-597X
Factor analysis of the Finnish version of the DSM-IV-MR-J
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| 1. Preoccupation | 983 | .513 | |
| 2. Tolerance | 984 | .770 | |
| 3. Withdrawal | 987 | .511 | |
| 4. Loss of control | 986 | .606 | |
| 5. Escape | 987 | (.282) | |
| 6. Chasing | 986 | .603 | |
| 7. Lies | 986 | .989 | |
| 8. Illegal acts | 984 | .310 | .455 |
| 9. Risked job/education/relationship | 988 | .357 | |
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| % of variance | 23.687 | 18.495 | |
| Cumulative % of variance | 23.687 | 42.183 | |
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| % of variance | 40.081 | 11.374 | |
| Cumulative % of variance | 40.081 | 51.454 |
Extraction method: Maximum likelihood; Rotation method: Varimax with Kaiser Normalization; Small loadings (<0.03) were omitted; N=988.
Figure 1Scree Plot of factors of the Finnish version of the DSM-IV-MR-J.
Positive endorsement and classification accuracy of the DSM-IV-MR-J criteria during the past year
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| Preoccupied with gambling (e.g. thinking about gambling or planning next venture). | 28 (2.8±1.0) | 24 (30.8±10.3) | 0.31 | 0.99 |
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| Needs to gamble with increasing amounts of money in order to achieve the desired excitement. | 45 (4.6±1.3) | 40 (51.3±11.1) | 0.51 | 0.99 |
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| Restlessness or irritability when attempting to cut down or stop gambling. | 20 (2.0±0.9) | 19 (24.4±9.5) | 0.24 | 0.99 |
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| Often spent much more money on gambling than planned. | 53 (5.4±1.4) | 38 (48.7±11.1) | 0.49 | 0.98 |
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| Gambles as a way of escaping from problems or relieving dysphoric mood (e.g. feelings of helplessness, guilt, anxiety, depression). | 9 (0.9±0.6) | 8 (10.3±6.8) | 0.10 | 0.99 |
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| After losing money gambling, often returns another day in order to get even (“chasing” one’s losses). | 30 (3.0±1.1) | 29 (37.2±10.7) | 0.37 | 0.99 |
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| Lies to family about gambling behaviour. | 41 (4.1±1.2) | 38 (48.7±11.1) | 0.49 | 0.99 |
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| Committed unsocial or illegal acts, such as gambling with school dinner or fare money, stealing from home or from outside home. | 115 (11.6±2.0) | 61 (78.2±9.2) | 0.78 | 0.94 |
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| Has had arguments with family, friends or others, or truanted from school because of gambling. | 24 (2.4±1.0) | 17 (21.8±9.2) | 0.22 | 0.99 |
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| 78 (7.9±1.7) | - | - |
*At-risk/problem gambling (ARPG) was defined using the DSM-IV-MR-J score≥2 [46]; CI, Confidence Intervals.
Gambling participation, at-risk/problem gambling and substance use among adolescents by gender
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| Chi=77.263, df=3, p≤0.001 | |||
| No gambling | 463 (48.4±3.1) | 185 (37.4±4.3) | 278 (60.2±4.5) | |
| Once or twice | 298 (31.2±2.9) | 160 (32.4±4.1) | 138 (29.9±4.2) | |
| Sometimes | 167 (17.5±2.4) | 123 (24.9±3.8) | 44 (9.5±2.7) | |
| Often | 28 (2.9±1.1) | 26 (5.3±2.0) | 2 (0.4±0.6) | |
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| Chi=40.892, df=1, p≤0.001 | |||
| At-risk/problem gambling (score ≥2) | 76 (7.9±1.7) | 66 (13.4±3.0) | 10 (2.2±1.3) | |
| No gambling or no risk/problem (score 0–1) | 880 (92.1±1.7) | 428 (86.6±3.0) | 452 (97.8±1.3) | |
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| Chi=4.512, df=1, p=0.041 | |||
| Yes | 76 (8.0±1.7) | 48 (9.9±2.7) | 28 (6.1±2.2) | |
| No | 870 (92.0±1.7) | 439 (90.1±2.7) | 431 (93.9±2.2) | |
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| Chi=2.298, df=1, p=0.138 | |||
| Yes | 84 (8.9±1.8) | 50 (10.2±2.7) | 34 (7.4±2.4) | |
| No | 865 (91.1±1.8) | 440 (89.8±2.7) | 425 (92.6±2.4) |
Significance (p) is determined by Chi-squared test; N=988; CI, Confidence Intervals.
Association between at-risk/problem gambling and the correlates
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| Gambling frequency (4 groups) | 281.677 | 3 | ≤0.001 | Often or sometimes | Never or once or twice |
| Video game playing (3 groups) | 71.718 | 2 | ≤0.001 | Weekly or more often | Never or less than once a week |
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| Smoking (2 groups) | 31.822 | 1 | ≤0.001 | Yes | No |
| Drinking for intoxication (2 groups) | 45.740 | 1 | ≤0.001 | Yes | No |
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| Family gambling (2 groups) | 6.123 | 1 | 0.016 | Yes | No |
| Peer gambling (2 groups) | 148.075 | 1 | ≤0.001 | Yes | No |
At-risk/problem gambling (ARPG) was defined using the DSM-IV-MR-J criteria (score≥2); Significance (p) is determined by chi-squared test; N=988.
Multivariate model with the correlates and at-risk/problem gambling
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| Male | 2.27 | 0.042 | 1.0-5.0 |
| Female | a | a | a |
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| Gambling often or sometimes | 5.78 | ≤0.001 | 3.0-11.0 |
| Never or once or twice | a | a | a |
| Video game playing weekly or more | 2.42 | 0.006 | 1.3-4.5 |
| Video game playing never or less than once a week | a | a | a |
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| Drinking for intoxication | 2.00 | 0.087 | 0.9-4.4 |
| No drinking for intoxication | a | a | a |
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| 1.74 | 0.191 | 0.8-4.0 |
| No smoking | a | a | a |
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| Family gambling | 0.94 | 0.846 | 0.5-1.7 |
| No family gambling | a | a | a |
| Peer gambling | 6.23 | ≤.001 | 3.8-13.8 |
| No peer gambling | a | a | a |
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| .451 |
Binary logistic regression analysis; At-risk/problem gambling was defined using the DSM-IV-MR-J criteria (score≥2); Reference group for at-risk/problem gambling: No gambling or no risk (DSM-IV-MR-J score=0-1); N=931; CI, Confidence Interval.