BWIN - HARVARD ONLINE RESEARCH RESULTS SHARED
29 June 2007
Leading European problem gambling experts attend
Vienna workshop on results
The Austrian listed online betting group Bwin took its
massive research project with Harvard University (see
previous InfoPowa report) a step further this week by
hosting a workshop in Vienna to share the results of the
Harvard findings with problem gambling experts across a
number of independent organisations. Drs. Howard Shaffer
and Richard LaBrie of Harvard Medical School conducted
the workshop.
Initial reports from those attending indicate that the
event was "very interesting and informative" and
"replete with new and relevant information." It is
understood that Bwin may be extending the scope of the
study in a follow-on project with the poker industry in
mind.
In a statement titled "First Empirical Study of Online
Gaming Behaviour" Bwin said that to date only
speculation has been available to guide an understanding
of the scale of gaming and problematic gaming behaviour
among online, as opposed to conventional sports bettors.
Now the initial results of Bwin's broad-based study
investigating the gaming behaviour of online players are
available, more light has been shed on the potential for
gaming related problems.
Harvard Medical School faculty from the Division on
Addictions have been active in the addiction research
and treatment field for the past 30 years. They have
been cooperating with bwin since May 2005 to undertake a
research project the like of which has never been done
before. For the first time ever, researchers are
examining online gaming, not by means of difficult to
verify opinions and self-report, but by carefully
studying the actual online behaviour of players.
In an anonymous study, researchers observed the actual
playing patterns and behaviour of more than 40 000
active bwin users for a period of eight months. The
first findings may be surprising to some, the betting
group says.
The first publication from this project is available at
the Division on Addictions (http://www.divisiononaddictions.org/html/library.htm).
The majority of the players observed in the course of
the study exhibited moderate gaming behaviour. For
example, the average loss of the players participating
in this eight-month study amounted to Euro 33.
Only 0.4 percent of the total sample could be classified
as distinctively heavy bettors with large losses,
suggesting that only a limited number of players might
have serious financial problems. Further research will
now investigate how many players report gaming related
problems at every level of play.
These encouraging initial results from the long-term
study indicate that the potential of sports betting to
cause a problem is considerably lower than generally
presumed.
One of the workshop participants was Geoffrey Godbold,
Chief Executive Officer of GAMcare. He said that "this
research will help identify addictive gamblers at an
early stage." He also suggested that, in terms of future
regulation, "it is important not to spoil the fun of the
majority but rather target the small minority that has
problems."
Dr. Howard Shaffer noted, "This is a landmark project
for both the gaming industry and science because we are
studying the actual gambling behaviour of a large sample
of Internet gamblers for the very first time. I am proud
of bwin for committing to using science as a guide to
assuring the welfare of their customers and to advancing
the safety of the Internet and new technology."
"Particularly in view of the fact that gaming addiction
is used generally as an argument to justify betting and
gaming monopolies, these initial results are specially
gratifying." bwin Co-CEO Norbert Teufelberger comments
the research project initiated by bwin. Co-CEO Manfred
Bodner adds: "The intensive collaboration between
researchers on the one hand and practitioners on the
other warrants that science does not conduct research
without taking practical experience into account. bwin
has dared to take that step and has consulted
independent experts on this subject matter. Which has
proven to be a good decision in all aspects."
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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