Article de Périodique
The Lancet Public Health Commission on gambling (2024)
Auteur(s) :
WARDLE, H. ;
DEGENHARDT, L. ;
MARIONNEAU, V. ;
REITH, G. ;
LIVINGSTONE, C. ;
SPARROW, M. ;
TRAN, L. T. ;
BIGGAR, B. ;
BUNN, C. ;
FARRELL, M. ;
KESAITE, V. ;
POZNYAK, V. ;
QUAN, J. ;
REHM, J. ;
RINTOUL, A. ;
SHARMA, M. ;
SHIFFMAN, J. ;
SISTE, K. ;
UKHOVA, D. ;
VOLBERG, R. ;
SALIFU YENDORK, J. ;
SAXENA, S.
Année :
2024
Page(s) :
e950-e994
Sous-type de document :
Revue de la littérature / Literature review
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Refs biblio. :
338
Domaine :
Addictions sans produit / Addictions without drug
Discipline :
SAN (Santé publique / Public health)
Thésaurus géographique
INTERNATIONAL
Thésaurus mots-clés
JEUX D'ARGENT ET DE HASARD
;
INDUSTRIE DU JEU
;
EVOLUTION
;
FACTEUR DE RISQUE
;
MORBIDITE
;
POLITIQUE
;
REGULATION
;
SANTE PUBLIQUE
;
RECOMMANDATION
;
DEFINITION
;
COMMERCE
;
RESEAUX SOCIAUX
;
INFLUENCE
;
MARKETING
;
ECONOMIE
;
EPIDEMIOLOGIE
;
PRECARITE
;
INEGALITE
;
PREVENTION
;
EFFICACITE
;
LEGISLATION
Résumé :
Key messages:
Commercial gambling is a rapidly growing global industry and is becoming increasingly digital.
The harms to health and wellbeing that result from gambling are more substantial than previously understood, extending beyond gambling disorder to include a wide range of gambling harms, which affect many people in addition to individuals who gamble.
Evolution of the gambling industry is at a crucial juncture; decisive action now can prevent or mitigate widespread harm to population health and wellbeing in the future. Thus far, globally, governments have paid too little attention to gambling harms and have not done enough to prevent or mitigate them.
Stronger policy and regulatory controls focused on harm prevention and the protection of public health and wellbeing, and independent of industry or other competing influences, are now needed. Given the increasingly global and boundary-spanning nature of the industry, international coordination on regulatory approaches will be necessary.
Commercial gambling is a rapidly growing global industry and is becoming increasingly digital.
The harms to health and wellbeing that result from gambling are more substantial than previously understood, extending beyond gambling disorder to include a wide range of gambling harms, which affect many people in addition to individuals who gamble.
Evolution of the gambling industry is at a crucial juncture; decisive action now can prevent or mitigate widespread harm to population health and wellbeing in the future. Thus far, globally, governments have paid too little attention to gambling harms and have not done enough to prevent or mitigate them.
Stronger policy and regulatory controls focused on harm prevention and the protection of public health and wellbeing, and independent of industry or other competing influences, are now needed. Given the increasingly global and boundary-spanning nature of the industry, international coordination on regulatory approaches will be necessary.
Affiliation :
School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK