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By KATHLEEN WEAVER Reporter Contributor
Gambling activity is widespread among U.S. adolescents and young
adults ages 14 through 21, according to a study conducted by researchers
at UB’s Research Institute on Addictions (RIA). Results of
the first national survey of its kind show problem
gambling—described as gambling with three or more negative
consequences (for example, gambling more than you intended or stealing
money to gamble) in the past year—occurring at a rate of 2.1
percent among youth 14 to 21. That percentage projects to approximately
750,000 young problem gamblers nationwide. In addition, 11
percent of the youth surveyed gambled twice a week or more, a rate that
describes frequent gambling. Sixty-eight percent of the youth
interviewed reported that they had gambled at least once in the past
year. “In a society where young people are increasingly
exposed to gambling influences, there is cause for concern,” said
John W. Welte, principal investigator on the study. The results
were available online in December 2007 and will be published in the
June issue of the Journal of Gambling Studies. A total of
2,274 U.S. youth were surveyed from August 2005 through January 2007 for
this study. Interviews were conducted in all 50 states and the District
of Columbia. The national, random-digit-dial telephone survey was
sampled from all phone numbers in the U.S. The rates of problem
gambling found in the study are not, in fact, as high as the rates of
problem gambling found in eight previous studies conducted in smaller
jurisdictions by other research teams, according to Welte. Five of those
studies were school surveys that obtained data only from youth attending
that school or residing in one state or one region of the country.
Others were telephone surveys using age-targeted population samples,
Welte said. “The 2.1 percent rate of problem gambling for our
national study has a 95 percent confidence level, making it unlikely
that we found a lower problem gambling rate by chance.”
Welte is a senior research scientist at RIA and a national expert in
the epidemiology of substance abuse and gambling. His co-investigator on
the study is Grace M. Barnes, senior research scientist at RIA and a
national expert in substance use pertaining to adolescents, parenting
and families. “As might be expected, all statistically
significant results showed that greater gambling involvement is
associated with aging into an adult status,” Welte stated.
“In fact, gambling may be associated with the transition into
adulthood.” The RIA researchers examined pivotal times of
life for youth (employment, student status, living independently from
parents and marriage) and found gambling increased with each major life
change. Those who worked full-time were more likely to gamble, those who
were not students were more likely to gamble frequently (twice a week or
more) and those who lived independently were more likely to gamble and
to be problem gamblers (three or more negative consequences during the
past year). “We compared problem gambling rates among youth
with problem gambling rates among adults from our national study of U.S.
adults in 2000,” Welte said. “As far as gender, it seems
likely that females’ gambling involvement tends to emerge in
adulthood, while male involvement can be high in adolescence. We found
identical problem gambling rates for adult males and young males (4
percent). We found adult females’ gambling rates were much higher
(3 percent) than that of young females (less than one-tenth of a
percent). In other words, problem gambling is almost nonexistent among
female adolescents and young adults.” Black youth were less
likely to have gambled than white youth, but if they gambled, it was
likely to be more frequent (30 percent vs. 12 percent respectively).
Asians as a racial group showed the lowest gambling involvement. Native
Americans were found to have a higher rate of frequent gambling (28
percent) when compared to whites (9 percent), as well as to be higher on
measures of problem gambling. This could be a reflection of the rapid
spread of legal gambling venues on Native American reservations.
Generally, low socioeconomic groups were less likely to gamble, but if
they did, were more likely to be problem gamblers. The highest
socioeconomic groups are associated with the lowest gambling
involvement. Religion was related to having gambled in the past
year, with every religious group except Catholics, who were less likely
than Protestants (except Baptists), to have gambled at all. Other
religions (which include Moslem, Hindu, Buddhist, Jehovah’s
Witnesses and others) had a lower rate of having gambled in the past
year (42 percent), but if they gambled, they had higher rates of
frequent gambling than any other religious group. Similarly, Baptists
were less likely than other Protestants to have gambled in the past
year, but if they gambled, they had higher rates of frequent gambling.
The study was funded by a $1.8 million grant from the National Institute
on Mental Health.
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