| Literature DB >> 27372832 |
Filipa Calado1, Joana Alexandre2, Mark D Griffiths3.
Abstract
Previous research has shown that gambling is a popular activity among adolescents. Following a rapid expansion of legalized gambling opportunities and the emergence of new forms of gambling, many researchers have carried out studies on adolescent gambling and problem gambling. The present paper reviews studies that have been conducted worldwide since 2000, and then presents a more detailed picture of adolescent gambling research in Europe, by providing a country-by country analysis. After an extensive search on academic databases and following an exclusion process, 44 studies were identified. The findings showed that 0.2-12.3 % of youth meet criteria for problem gambling, notwithstanding differences among assessment instruments, cut-offs, and timeframes. However, despite this variability, several demographic characteristics were associated with adolescent gambling involvement and problem gambling. It is concluded that a small but significant minority of adolescents have gambling-related problems. Such findings will hopefully encourage more research into youth gambling to further understand the determinants of this phenomenon.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescence; Adolescent gambling; Gambling; Gambling prevalence; Problem gambling; Youth gambling
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27372832 PMCID: PMC5445143 DOI: 10.1007/s10899-016-9627-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gambl Stud ISSN: 1050-5350
Overview of adolescent gambling prevalence studies across the world
| Country | Study | Measure | Sample characteristics | Response rate | Gambling prevalence | Problem gambling prevalence | Legal age to gamble |
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| Canada | Huang and Boyer ( | CPGI | National, 5666 youth aged 15- 24 years that completed a survey using computer assisting interviews | 77 % | 61.35 % (past year) | CPGI: | 18 years for Alberta, Manitoba, Quebec and 19 years for other states |
| USA | Welte et al. ( | SOGS-RA and DIS | National, 2274 youth aged 14–21 years, who were surveyed by telephone | Not reported | 68 % (past year prevalence) | SOGS-RA: | From 12 to 21 years depending on states and gambling activities |
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| Brazil | Spritzer et al. ( | DSM-IV-J | 661 with adolescents aged 14–17 years (these participants were a sub-sample of the general population), who were interviewed face-to-face | 66.4 and 81 % for the adolescent sub-sample | 6.9 % (no specific time frame is provided) | DSM-IV-J | 18 years |
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| Hong Kong | Hsu et al. ( | DSM-IV-MR-J | 926 youth aged 12–20 years, who completed the survey in the class | 84.5 % | 46.5 % (past-year) | DSM-IV-MR-J: | 18 years |
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| Australia | Delfabbro and Thrupp ( | DSM-IV-J | South Australia, 505 youth aged 15–17, who completed the survey in the class | Not reported | 47.8 % (past-year) | DSM-IV-J: | 18 years for most of gambling activities and 16 years for lotteries in some states |
| Delfabbro et al. ( | DSM-IV-J and VGS | ACT region, 926 young people aged 11–19 years, who completed a survey in the class | Not reported | 70.4 % (past-year) | DSM-IV-J: | ||
| Lambos et al. ( | DSM-IV-J | South Australia, 2669 young people aged 13–17 years, who completed the survey in the class | Not reported | 56.3 % (past-year) | DSM-IV-J: | ||
| Delfabbro and King ( | DSM-IV-J | Darwin metropolitan area, 1107 aged 14–18 years, who completed the survey in the class | Not reported | 50.8 % (past-year prevalence for participants aged less than 18 years of age) | DSM-IV-J: | ||
| New Zealand | Rossen ( | DSM-IV-MR-J | 2005 youth aged 11–21 years in the Upper North Island, who completed the survey in the class | Not reported | 65.4 % (past-year) | DSM-IV-MR-J: | 18 years for most gambling activities and 20 years to enter a casino |
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| Albania | Molinaro et al. ( | Lie/Bet | National data from ESPAD, 3189 students aged 16 years, who completed the survey in the class | 90 % | Not reported | Lie/Bet: | 18 years |
| Croatia | Dodig ( | CAGI | 1948 students aged 14–20 years from Zagreb, Osijek, Rijeka, and Split, who completed the survey in the class | Not reported | Not reported | CAGI: | 18 years |
| Cyprus | Molinaro et al. ( | Lie/Bet | National data from ESPAD, 4243 students aged 16 years, who completed the survey in the class | Not reportedb | Not reported | Lie/Bet: | 18 years |
| Denmark | Kristiansen and Jensen ( | SOGS-RA | National, 2223 adolescents aged 11–17 years, who completed the survey in the class | 91 % | 70.1 % (past-year) | SOGS-RA: | 18 years for casinos, slot machines and Internet, and 16 years for other kinds of gambling |
| Molinaro et al. ( | Lie/Bet | National data from ESPAD, 2181 students aged 16 years, who completed the survey in the class | 89 % | Not reported | Lie/Bet: | ||
| Finland | Ilkas and Aho ( | SOGS-RA | 5000 adolescents aged 12–17 years | Not reportedc | 52 % (past-year) | SOGS-RA: | 18 years |
| Molinaro et al. ( | Lie/Bet | National data from ESPAD, 3744 students aged 16 years, who completed the survey in the class | 90 % | Not reported | Lie/Bet: | ||
| Germany | Hurrelmann et al. ( | DSM-IV-MR-J | Regional, 5009 adolescents aged 13–19 years from Federal State of North Rhine–Westphalia | d | 39.9 % (past-year) | DSM-IV-MR-J: | 18 years |
| Duven et al. ( | DSM-IV-MR-J | Regional, 3967 students aged 12–18 years from Rhineland-Palatinate | d | 41.2 % (past year) | DSM-IV-MR-J: | ||
| Great Britain | Ashworth and Doyle ( | DSM-IV-MR-J | 9529 adolescents aged 12–15 years from England and Wales, who completed the survey in the class | 40 % (school response rate) | 34 % (past seven days) | DSM-IV-MR-J: | 16 years for lotteries and scratchcards and 18 years for other gambling activities |
| Griffiths and Wood ( | DSM-IV-MR-J | National, 8017 adolescents aged 12–15 years, who completed the survey in the class | 26 % (school response rate) | 73 % (lifetime) | DSM-IV-MR-J: | ||
| Forrest and McHale ( | DSM-IV-MR-J | National, 8958 aged 11–15 years, who completed the survey in the class | 22 % (school response rate) | 21 % (past seven days) | DSM-IV-MR-J: | ||
| Ipsos MORI ( | DSM-IV-MR-J | 2796 students aged 11–16 years from England and Wales, who completed the survey in the class | 20 % (school response rate) | 16 % (past seven days among people aged 11–15 years) | DSM-IV-MR-J: | ||
| United Kingdom | Molinaro et al. ( | DSM-IV-MR-J | National data from ESPAD, 1712 students aged 16 years, who completed the survey in the class | 81 % | Not reported | Lie/Bet: | |
| Iceland | Olasson et al. ( | SOGS-RA and DSM-IV-MR-J | Reykjavik and Akureyri region, 750 adolescents aged 16–18 years, who completed the survey in the class | Not reported | 79.1 % (past-year) | DSM-IV-MR-J: | 18 years |
| Olasson et al. ( | SOGS-RA and DSM-IV-MR-J | Reykjavík region, 3511 adolescents aged 13–15 years, who completed the survey in the class | 84 % | 70 % (past-year) | DSM-IV-MR-J: | ||
| Olason et al. ( | DSM-IV-MR-J | Hafnarfjörður region, 1537 adolescents aged 13–18 years, who completed the survey in the class | 81.4 % | 56.6 % (past-year) | DSM-IV-MR-J: | ||
| Italy | Bastiani et al. ( | CPGI-short form | National, 1241 youth aged 15–24 years derived from the ISPAD survey, who completed an anonymous postal survey | 35 % | 35.7 % (past-year) | CPGI: | 18 years |
| Molinaro et al. ( | Lie/Bet | National data from ESPAD, 4837 students aged 16 years, who completed the survey in the class | Not reportedb | Not reported | Lie/Bet; | ||
| Lithuania | Skokauskas and Satkeviciute ( | SOGS-RA and DSM-IV-MR-J | Kaunas city, 835 youth aged 10–18 years, who completed the survey in the class | 96 % | 82.7 % (lifetime) | SOGS-RA: | 21 years for casino operated games and 18 years for other gambling activities. There is no legal prohibition for lotteries |
| Molinaro et al. ( | Lie/Bet | National data from ESPAD, 2476 students aged 16 years, who completed the survey in the class | 89 % | Not reported | Lie/Bet: | ||
| Norway | Johansson and Götestam ( | DSM-IV | National, 3237 adolescents aged 12–18 years, who completed a telephone and postal interview | 45.2 % | 24.9 % (past seven days) | DSM-IV: | 18 years |
| Molde et al. ( | DSM-IV subscale of Massachusetts Adolescent Gambling Screen (MAGS) | 1351 students aged 16–19 years from West Norway, who completed an online survey | 69.8 % | Not reported | DSM-IV: | ||
| Rossow and Molde ( | Lie/Bet and SOGS-RA | National, 20,703 students aged 13 to 19 years, who completed the survey in the class | 80.2 % | 74.4 % (past-year) | SOGS-RA: | ||
| Rossow et al. ( | SOGS-RA and Lie/Bet | National, 4912 adolescents aged 13–18 years, who completed the survey in the class | 85.7 % | 69.3 % (past-year) | SOGS-RA: | ||
| Rossow et al. ( | SOGS-RA and Lie/Bet | National, 3855 adolescents aged 13–18 years, who completed the survey in the class | 77.7 % | 67 % (past-year) | SOGS-RA: | ||
| Hanss et al. ( | PGSI | National, 2.059 adolescents aged 17 years, who completed a postal survey | 70.4 % | 26.1 % (past-month) | PGSI: | ||
| Romania | Lupu et al. ( | GA-20 | Cluj, Salaj, and Bacau regions, 500 adolescents aged 14–19 years, who completed the survey in the class | e | 82 (lifetime) | GA-20: | 18 years |
| Lupu and Todirita ( | GA-20 | Cluj-Napoca and Harghita counties, 1032 adolescents aged 11–19 years, who completed the survey in the class | Not reported | Not reported | GA 20: | ||
| Molinaro et al. ( | Lie/Bet | National data from ESPAD, 2770 students aged 16 years, who completed the survey in the class | Not reportedb | Not reported | Lie/Bet: | ||
| Serbia | Molinaro et al. ( | Lie/Bet | National data from ESPAD survey, 6084 students aged 16 years, who completed the survey in the class | 86 % | Not reported | Lie/Bet: | 18 years |
| Spain | Becoña et al. ( | SOGS-RA | Galicia region, 2790 youth aged 14–21 years, who completed a survey in the class | Not reported | Not reported | SOGS-RA: | 18 years |
| Míguez and Becoña ( | SOGS-RA | Galicia region, 1447 youth aged 11–16 years, who completed a survey in the class | 92.4 % | Not reported | SOGS-RA: | ||
| Sweden | Fröberg et al. ( | PGSI | National, 2570 youth aged 16–24 years, who completed a telephone and postal survey | 72.5 % | Not reported | PGSI: | 18 years |
| Switzerland | Surís et al. ( | SOGS-RA | Canton of Neuchatel, 1126 students aged 15–20 years who completed an online survey | 28.4 % | 37.5 % (past-year) | SOGS-RA: | 18 years |
aNon-peer-reviewed papers
bThese studies were taken from the paper by Molinaro et al. (2014). This paper summarized probable problem gambling across nine European countries using data from ESPAD, and which did not indicate the response rates for each country. After analysing the ESPAD report in detail, it can be observed that student response rates were not available for Cyprus, Italy and Romania, and thus the response rates for these countries were not reported in the present review
cThis study is published only in Finish. The information reported is based on a English abstract and in the review of Kristiansen and Jensen (2011) conducted among the Nordic countries, and thus it was not possible to obtain more specific information about the methodology, such as the modality of survey used and response rates
dThese papers are only published in German and the information reported was based on Hayer (2014), and thus it was not possible to obtain more specific information concerning methodology, such as the modality of survey used and the response rates
eThis paper was not fully available in academic databases and the information reported is based on its abstract, which did not contain more specific information about methodology, such as response rates