RESPONSIBLE GAMBLING KNOWLEDGE IN EUROPE COULD BE
BETTER
27 November 2009
Only one-third of the nations surveyed had
carried out comprehensive surveys
A UK academic who has presented some controversial
online gambling studies in the past, Professor Mark
Griffiths from Nottingham Trent University, has
presented a report on responsible gambling research to
the European Parliament in collaboration with British
MEP Malcolm Harbour.
The report "Problem Gambling
in Europe" highlights the lack of known empirical
evidence surrounding gambling and problem gambling,
presenting an overview that suggests that many
governments are not doing enough research into this
critical important subject.
Professor Griffiths
conducted a country-by-country analysis of the known
empirical evidence on gambling and problem gambling in
Europe and found that only one-third of the nations
surveyed had carried out comprehensive surveys.
The findings will be read with considerable interest in
an environment where state gambling monopolies
frequently justify their stranglehold on national
markets by claiming that it is to protect citizens from
compulsive gambling.
Griffiths revealed that
countries that had carried out national studies on
gambling and problem gambling of varying
representativeness, quality and empirical rigour
included Belgium, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany,
Great Britain, The Netherlands, Lithuania, Sweden and
Switzerland.
However, he found Austria, France,
Hungary, Romania, Russia, Slovakia, Slovenia and Spain
lacking, commenting that these countries had only
conducted their research at a regional or local level.
And almost nothing is known about gambling and
problem gambling in Bulgaria, Cyprus, the Czech
Republic, Greece, Ireland, Latvia, Luxembourg, Malta,
Poland and Portugal.
“The debate about gambling
is multi-faceted,” said Adrian Morris, deputy managing
director for StanleyBet, which has seen its share of
legal struggles against state monopolies.
“Many
reasons and interpretations are put forward as to why a
particular [European Union] state does or does not grant
access to its market by operators from other Member
States, be they online or offline, be they casino,
betting or other type of gambling operator.
“I
have become increasingly concerned that this debate is
informed by little or no information and the
argumentation seems to be based on myths appealing to
emotion rather than facts informing reason and leading
to policymaking. Unfortunately, to this day, it seems
that emotion continues to overrule facts.”
The
Griffith report comes in a week where the Las Vegas Sun
newspaper drew attention to startling new research into
gambling addiction involving functional magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) scans of the human brain during
gambling.
The scans provided the first
biological evidence of what treatment providers had long
known from working with the hardest cases: For addicts,
gambling is truly compulsive and becomes all-important -
eclipsing commitments to family and work with a need not
unlike scoring drugs and getting high.
The
research hopefully opens the way to more effective help
for the small but tragic percentage of gamblers who fall
prey to addiction.
The Las Vegas Sun article
reports that a growing collection of research has found
that the most afflicted gamblers have the kinds of
biological brain disorders that are found among drug and
alcohol abusers.
"Before the relatively recent
use of MRI machines, scientists could only view people's
behavior, dissect the brains of the deceased or study
brain chemistry by drawing fluid from the body.
Functional magnetic resonance imaging allows real-time
study of the brain by measuring changes in blood flow as
well as oxygen levels in the blood," the report notes.
The report goes on to examine the phenomenon of
dopamine, a feel-good chemical secreted by the brain
which in the words of one eminent researcher 'highjacks'
the brain's reward system to create intense cravings and
an obsessive focus on gambling.
"The brain pulls
off this mutiny by figuring out that, if it can identify
and connect with an addictive target - say, a slot
machine - it can produce its own jackpot - a flood of
rewarding dopamine," the article explains. "Triggering
that dopamine overflow can overwhelm brain circuits that
normally moderate risky behavior."
Addicts in
this situation seek out gambling not for pleasure, but
for the dopamine rush, which in turn creates a vicious
circle where the person focuses more intensely on
gambling at the expense of everything else.
In
further studies, the dopamine rush among addicted
research subjects occurred before any gambling and in
response to cues indicating that gambling was about to
occur, such as an image of a slot machine or the
person's favourite casino.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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