4.6 Article

Variety of gambling activities from adolescence to age 30 and association with gambling problems: a 15-year longitudinal study of a general population sample

Journal

ADDICTION
Volume 110, Issue 12, Pages 1985-1993

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/add.13083

Keywords

Adolescent gambling; adult gambling; development; gambling participation; gambling problems; gambling variety; longitudinal study

Funding

  1. Quebec Government Ministry of Health
  2. Fond Quebecois de la Recherche sur la Societe et la Culture
  3. Canada's Social Science and Humanities Research Council
  4. St-Justine Hospital's Research Center
  5. University of Montreal

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AimsTo estimate trajectories of gambling variety from mid-adolescence to age 30years, and compare the different trajectory groups with regard to the type and the frequency of gambling activities practiced and gambling-related problems. DesignProspective longitudinal cohort study. SettingProvince of Quebec, Canada. ParticipantsA mixed-gender general population cohort assessed at ages 15 (n=1882), 22 (n=1785) and 30 (n=1358). MeasurementsAdolescent and adult versions of the South Oaks Gambling Screen (SOGS). FindingsGroup-based trajectory analysis identified three distinct trajectories: a late-onset low trajectory (26.7% of sample) initiating gambling at age 22, an early-onset low trajectory (64.8% of sample), characterized by one to two different activities from age 15 onwards and a high trajectory (8.4% of sample), with an average of four to five different activities from age 15 to 30. Males (14.2%) were four times more likely to be on a high trajectory than females (3.5%) (P<0.001). Preferred types of gambling activities were similar across the three trajectories. Participants on a high trajectory reported higher gambling frequency at ages 15 and 30, and were more likely to experience problem gambling at age 30: 3.09 [95% confidence interval (CI)=1.66, 5.75] and 2.26 (95% CI=1.27, 4.04) times more, respectively, than late-onset low and early-onset low participants, even when socio-economic status (SES), frequency of gambling and problem gambling in adolescence, gender, age 30 education, SES and frequency of gambling were controlled. ConclusionsEngaging in several different types of gambling in early adulthood appears to be a risk factor for emergence of problem gambling.

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