Home > Children and gambling – evidence to inform regulation and responses in Ireland. Based on a secondary analysis of the European School Survey Project on Alcohol and Other Drugs (ESPAD).

McAvoy, Helen, Reynolds, Ciara, Sunday, Salome ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8396-788X, Hanafin, Joan ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8016-2266 and Clancy, Luke ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2407-2263 (2023) Children and gambling – evidence to inform regulation and responses in Ireland. Based on a secondary analysis of the European School Survey Project on Alcohol and Other Drugs (ESPAD). Dublin: Institute of Public Health. DOI: 10.14655/11971-1084912.

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Almost a quarter of 16-year-olds in Ireland gambled for money in the previous year, according to a new report, which found the odds of gambling stacked against boys compared to girls. The report, ‘Children and gambling – evidence to inform regulation and responses in Ireland’, presents data from Irish secondary school students, collected through the European School Survey Project on Alcohol and Other Drugs (ESPAD). The joint report published by the Institute of Public Health (IPH) and TobaccoFree Research Institute Ireland (TFRI) analysed 1,949 survey responses from Irish 16-year-olds, who were asked about their gambling activities in 2019. 

The Europe-wide survey, which runs every four years, examines whether teens use slot machines, play cards or dice, lotteries (including scratch cards and bingo) or bet on sports or animals, whether they do so online or whether they experience problem or excessive gambling. The survey also considers other factors, such as, sociodemographic and family characteristics, social media use, gaming behaviours, substance use, relationships and self-harm.

Overall trends
Overall 22.9% of 16-year-olds in Ireland reported gambling for money in the previous year, but this rate was higher among boys at 28.2% compared to 17.9% for girls. 

Of the teens who gambled for money in the previous year, 10.3% experienced excessive gambling, while 5.6% met the criteria for problem gambling. 

Children were considered to be experiencing problem gambling if they reported feeling the need to lie to important people about how much money they gambled and if they felt the need to bet more and more money.

Of those who gambled in the previous year, 23.1% reported engaging in online gambling, which was significantly associated with betting on sports and animals and associated with both excessive gambling and problem gambling. 

The report also found that 16-year-olds who gambled online had a 4.2-fold higher odds of excessive gambling.

The analysis further estimated that around 21.3% of 16-year-olds, who gambled in the previous year, were getting into difficulty with controlling their gambling - 19.0% felt the need to bet more money and 8.1% reported lying to important people about how much money they gambled.

The findings highlight the need to protect children from direct and indirect gambling harms, as well as the need to collect and monitor data on gambling behaviours among children.

Of all 16-year-olds who gambled in the previous year: 

  • 59.7% were boys 
  • 21.3%% were getting into difficulty with controlling their gambling
  • 19.0% reported feeling the need to bet more and more money 
  • 8.1% reported lying to important people about how much money they gambled.
     

Risk of harm for boys and girls 
The report found that boys exhibited different gambling behaviours than girls and had higher odds of excessive gambling. 

Approximately 80% of 16-year-olds, who gambled in the previous year and were experiencing excessive or problem gambling, were boys. 

Of the 16-year-olds who gambled in the last 12 months, it was more common for boys to gamble online, bet on sports or animals, and gamble excessively. 

Among those who gambled in the previous year, excessive gambling was around three times more common among boys than girls and problem gambling was over two and a half times more common among boys than girls....

This short video summarises the key takeaway messages from the webinar launch, which considered the report findings, policy implications, and future research.

 

Item Type
Report
Publication Type
Irish-related, Report
Drug Type
Behavioural addiction
Intervention Type
Screening / Assessment
Date
September 2023
Identification #
DOI: 10.14655/11971-1084912
Pages
89 p.
Publisher
Institute of Public Health
Place of Publication
Dublin
EndNote
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