Article
Details
Citation
Wardle H, Donnachie C, Critchlow N, Brown A, Bunn C, Dobbie F, Gray C, Mitchell D, Purves R, Reith G, Stead M & Hunt K (2021) The impact of the initial Covid-19 lockdown upon regular sports bettors in Britain: findings from a cross-sectional online study. Addictive Behaviors, 118, Art. No.: 106876. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.addbeh.2021.106876
Abstract
Background: The Covid-19 outbreak precipitated unprecedented restrictions on daily life internationally. In Britain, as elsewhere, this included the suspension of professional sports events during the initial ¡®lockdown¡¯. Regular sports bettors are at higher risk of gambling harms and the Covid-19 pandemic may exacerbate known risk factors for the experience of these harms (stress, anxiety, financial difficulties etc).
Aims and Methods: We conducted an online cross-sectional survey (July 2020 of 3886 British people who had bet regularly (at least monthly) on sports prior to Covid-19. Multi-variate logistic regression models, run separately for men and women, explored associations between moderate risk and problem gambling with changes in Covid-19 related social and personal circumstances and changing gambling behaviours during Britain¡¯s initial ¡®lockdown¡¯ (March-June 2020).
Results: Adjusted odds of moderate risk/problem gambling were higher among men (ORmen=1.31 [95% CI 0.97-1.76]) and women (ORwomen=2.22 [1.19-4.12]) who reported increasing financial difficulties due to Covid-19, had lower wellbeing scores (ORmen=2.17 [1.65-2.84]; ORwomen=3.65 [2.02-6.62]) or who were shielding for health reasons (ORmen=1.59 [1.07-2.35]; ORwomen=4.30 [1.91-9.69]). Odds were higher for women whose frequency of gambling increased during lockdown ORwomen=3.91 [1.85-8.27]). Odds of problem gambling (ORmen=2.50 [1.38-4.53]) or experiencing gambling harms during lockdown (ORmen=2.21 [1.25-3.94] were higher among men who started a new gambling activity during the initial lockdown.
Conclusions: Changing social and economic circumstances related to Covid-19 were associated with gambling harms during Britain¡¯s initial lockdown. Those changing gambling behaviours, such as increasing gambling frequency or starting a new gambling activity should be viewed as vulnerable to gambling harms.
Keywords
Gambling; Covid-19; Sports betting; Gambling harms
Journal
Addictive Behaviors: Volume 118
Status | Published |
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Funders | |
Publication date | 31/07/2021 |
Publication date online | 23/02/2021 |
Date accepted by journal | 08/02/2021 |
URL | |
ISSN | 0306-4603 |
People (5)
Research Fellow, Institute for Social Marketing
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Professor, Institute for Social Marketing
Lecturer in Substance Use, Sociology, Social Policy & Criminology
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