People in poor neighborhoods are twice as likely to have gambling problems, study finds

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BUFFALO, N.Y. – The poorer the neighborhood, the higher the risk for problem gambling, according to a study from the University at Buffalo Research Institute on Addictions (RIA).

Based on representative telephone interviews with nearly 5,000 people, ages 14 to 90, in the United States, the study found that problem gambling was twice as likely in neighborhoods with the highest levels of concentrated poverty compared to neighborhoods with the lowest poverty levels.

The study was published in the Journal of Behavioral Addictions last June.

In areas with the highest “neighborhood disadvantage” – determined by census factors such as the percentage of people who were unemployed, received public assistance, and/or live in poverty – more than 11 percent were problem gamblers, compared to just 5 percent in neighborhoods ranking in the top fifth of economic advantage.

“We found that neighborhood disadvantage had a substantial effect on problem gambling, even after controlling for a person’s socioeconomic status, age, gender or race,” says Grace M. Barnes, PhD, RIA senior research scientist and first author. “We also controlled for the convenience of gambling opportunities in these neighborhoods, and our findings were unchanged.”

Further, individuals with the lowest socioeconomic status in the poorest neighborhoods were at greatest risk for gambling problems.

Problem gambling was determined by a number of symptoms, including gambling with increasing amounts of money, repeated unsuccessful efforts to control or stop gambling, and preoccupation with gambling activities. Types of gambling included casinos, sports betting, horse or dog racing, lotteries and online gambling, as well as raffles, office pools, charitable gambling, pulltabs and bingo.

The authors speculated on a number of reasons why gambling is worse in poorer neighborhoods. “It may be that people who live in disadvantaged neighborhoods do not see many role models of financial success achieved through conventional means,” says John W. Welte, PhD, RIA senior research scientist and a study co-author. “Therefore, gambling may be viewed as one of the few opportunities for financial advancement, and perhaps provides the lure as a means for easily gaining money.”

In addition to Barnes and Welte, the study’s other co-authors, both at RIA, are Marie Cecile O. Tidwell, PhD, project manager, and Joseph H. Hoffman, data analyst.

RIA is a research center of the University at Buffalo (UB) and a national leader in the study of alcohol and substance abuse issues. RIA’s research programs, most of which have multiple-year funding, are supported by federal, state and private foundation grants. Located on UB’s Downtown Campus, RIA is a member of the dynamic Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus and helps promote UB’s strategic focus on research initiatives.
 

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UB is a great school and has a terrific graduate program, just ask my wife. :)
 

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UB is a great school and has a terrific graduate program, just ask my wife. :)

Tell her the Clinton Portis jersey she sent me a couple years ago still gets worn a few times a year during Skins games
 

Rx Alchemist.
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Yea it is kinda sad when you walk into a bodega in a low income neighborhood and see these people, who you know cannot afford it, spend way too much on lottery tickets and scratch offs. It's basically a stupidity tax.
 

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Yea it is kinda sad when you walk into a bodega in a low income neighborhood and see these people, who you know cannot afford it, spend way too much on lottery tickets and scratch offs. It's basically a stupidity tax.

Lotto tickets are way to get the poor to contribute their share to the tax system.
 

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If you felt that was your only chance at getting you and your family out of being poor, long shot or not then it makes sense to play
 

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If lotto is included in this, makes sense... otherwise I would expect it to be middle class, but guess not
 

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it's obvious you have no clue about the endless amount of lies FH the dumpster diver has told over the years.. he's laughed at everywhere.

Regardless what your beef is with the guy, kind of not cool to trash his wife's school. I mean, just don't say anything.

BTW - I've posted here since 2007. I think I know FH a bit so I kind of have a clue who he is and what he posts.
 

EV Whore
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I have a hard time believing they can make this claim with any sort of statistical significance based on a mere 5,000 phone calls...
 

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If lotto is included in this, makes sense... otherwise I would expect it to be middle class, but guess not

I would guess lotto and scratch off are included. Crazy how much people donate to this stuff weekly. Just donating money
 

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Everytime i go in to a fast mart and see all the people buying lotto or scratch off tickets, i wonder does all it money go where it is suppose to go, being the schools systems ect.................i think in 20 yrs i purchase 5 scratch off tickets max
 

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