Literature DB >> 28707140

Disordered Gambling Prevalence: Methodological Innovations in a General Danish Population Survey.

Glenn W Harrison1,2,3, Lasse J Jessen4, Morten I Lau5,6, Don Ross7,8,9.   

Abstract

We study Danish adult gambling behavior with an emphasis on discovering patterns relevant to public health forecasting and economic welfare assessment of policy. Methodological innovations include measurement of formative in addition to reflective constructs, estimation of prospective risk for developing gambling disorder rather than risk of being falsely negatively diagnosed, analysis with attention to sample weights and correction for sample selection bias, estimation of the impact of trigger questions on prevalence estimates and sample characteristics, and distinguishing between total and marginal effects of risk-indicating factors. The most significant novelty in our design is that nobody was excluded on the basis of their response to a 'trigger' or 'gateway' question about previous gambling history. Our sample consists of 8405 adult Danes. We administered the Focal Adult Gambling Screen to all subjects and estimate prospective risk for disordered gambling. We find that 87.6% of the population is indicated for no detectable risk, 5.4% is indicated for early risk, 1.7% is indicated for intermediate risk, 2.6% is indicated for advanced risk, and 2.6% is indicated for disordered gambling. Correcting for sample weights and controlling for sample selection has a significant effect on prevalence rates. Although these estimates of the 'at risk' fraction of the population are significantly higher than conventionally reported, we infer a significant decrease in overall prevalence rates of detectable risk with these corrections, since gambling behavior is positively correlated with the decision to participate in gambling surveys. We also find that imposing a threshold gambling history leads to underestimation of the prevalence of gambling problems.

Entities:  

Keywords:  DSM criteria; Denmark; FLAGS; Formative and reflective constructs; Gambling disorder prevalence; Prevalence survey methodology

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 28707140     DOI: 10.1007/s10899-017-9707-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gambl Stud        ISSN: 1050-5350


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8.  Using a Rasch model to examine the utility of the South Oaks Gambling Screen across clinical and community samples.

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9.  The prevalence of problem gambling in Denmark in 2005 and 2010: a sociodemographic and socioeconomic characterization.

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3.  Designing and Evaluating the Validity and Reliability of the Persian Gambling Disorder Screening Questionnaire.

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