THE NUMBERS GAME
20 March 2009
UK newspaper uses statistics to play up
gambling addiction
Well known for its sometimes sensationalised opposition
to Internet gambling, the UK newspaper the Daily Mail
this week sported headlines bellowing that "Nearly
200,000 'are hooked on online gambling'", going on to
suggest that the Labour government's "lax" gaming laws
have created nearly 15 000 new addicts in one year
alone.
The newspaper came to this conclusion by
taking survey numbers from the UK Gambling Commission
which show that 5.6 percent of over-16s had participated
in ‘remote gambling’ in 2008, up from 5.2 percent in
2007. It's reporters then applied that percentage
against the total population of the United Kingdom to
arrive at a figure of 2.7 million online gamblers, which
it reported was an increase of 198 000 from the previous
year.
It then quoted unidentified experts as
claiming that 7.4 percent of these players "will be
problem gamblers" which would mean that the increase in
addicted gamblers would, from the Daily Mail's
perspective, amount to 14 700 over last year.
What the newspaper failed to mention was that remote
gambling per se has a low percentage increase, and that
the biggest increase in gambling pertained to punters
having a go on the National Lottery, a fact pointed out
in another debate during the week by Britain's Sports
Minister Gerry Sutcliffe. It also failed to mention that
definitions of what practically constitutes addictive
gambling or "possibly problem gambling behaviour" vary,
and are notoriously imprecise and inconsistent - in some
cases classifying people who bet more than twice a week
as "at risk". And the fact that there has been an
increase in the number of people gambling online does
not necessarily guarantee a significant increase in
addicted compulsive gamblers when calculated against the
entire population of Great Britain.
Again quoting
unidentified "separate figures" the Mail reports that
these "suggest" that the average amount of debt for each
problem gambler is GBP 17 500.
The Mail report
ends by quoting the Conservative opposition political
party, who opined that its findings were "clear evidence
of the soaring levels of despair brought about by the
Government’s controversial decision to ease betting laws
to allow the first TV ads for casinos, bookmakers and
gambling websites."
Playing poker and bingo over
the internet has become increasingly popular,
particularly among women, the newspaper noted.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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