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Published in: International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction 4/2021

01-08-2021 | Original Article

Gamblers’ Perceptions of Stakeholder Responsibility for Minimizing Gambling Harm

Authors: Heather M. Gray, Debi A. LaPlante, Brett Abarbanel, Bo J. Bernhard

Published in: International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction | Issue 4/2021

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Abstract

Increasingly, industry operators and governments espouse the view that they play a role in minimizing gambling harm and have developed and implemented programs and policies designed to promote responsible gambling. However, little is known about gamblers’ perceptions of responsibility for minimizing gambling harm or whether these perceptions are linked to gamblers’ own experience of gambling harm. Gamblers’ perceptions of stakeholder responsibility for minimizing gambling harm could impact not only their gambling behavior but also the potential for legal action following excessive financial loss. We surveyed participants selected from MGM Resorts International (MGM)’s loyalty card database (N = 3748) regarding their perceptions of responsibility for minimizing gambling harm. Additionally, we administered the Brief Biosocial Gambling Screen (BBGS), the Positive Play Scale, and measures assessing participants’ understanding of gambling concepts and use of responsible gambling strategies. Compared to those who screened negative, participants who screened positive on the BBGS had more diffuse conceptions of responsibility for minimizing gambling harm and were more likely to hold five particular stakeholder groups (e.g., MGM Resorts employees, government regulators, public safety officials) responsible. In multivariate analyses, participants’ distributed sense of responsibility for reducing gambling harm predicted their BBGS status over and above other risk factors (i.e., Positive Play, understanding of gambling concepts, use of responsible gambling strategies). We discuss implications for responsible gambling programs and policies.
Footnotes
1
The report does not provide a statistical test of this association.
 
2
In Wood et al. (2017), this item is worded, “Gambling is a good way to make money.” However, Wood and colleagues changed the framing of that item after publication, and we adopted their current framing for this study to allow for possible comparison across studies and sites.
 
3
This question used a check-all-that-apply format, which presents some interpretation difficulty. It is possible that a participant who endorsed no options simply skipped the question, and that such a participant should be considered to have missing data. After some consideration, we elected not to set such responses as missing; if a participant failed to endorse any options, we set their response as zero. The same holds for the “Responsibility for minimizing gambling harm” question. The pattern of results was the same when we considered such participants to have missing data for these two questions.
 
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Metadata
Title
Gamblers’ Perceptions of Stakeholder Responsibility for Minimizing Gambling Harm
Authors
Heather M. Gray
Debi A. LaPlante
Brett Abarbanel
Bo J. Bernhard
Publication date
01-08-2021
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction / Issue 4/2021
Print ISSN: 1557-1874
Electronic ISSN: 1557-1882
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11469-019-0056-4

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