Gambling, Substance Use and Violence in Male and Female Adolescents

被引:0
作者
Zu Wei Zhai
Georgina L. Duenas
Jeremy Wampler
Marc N. Potenza
机构
[1] Middlebury College,Department of Psychology
[2] Problem Gambling Services,Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services
[3] Yale School of Medicine,Department of Psychiatry
[4] The Connecticut Council on Problem Gambling,Department of Neuroscience
[5] The Connecticut Mental Health Center,Child Study Center
[6] Yale University,undefined
[7] Yale School of Medicine,undefined
来源
Journal of Gambling Studies | 2020年 / 36卷
关键词
Gambling; Substance use; Violence; Weapons; Adolescents; Gender;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The study systematically examined the link between history of gambling, and substance-use and violence-related measures in male and female adolescents, and compared association differences between genders in representative youth risk behavior surveillance data. An anonymous survey was administered to 2425 9th- to 12th-grade students in the state of Connecticut to assess risk behaviors that impact health. Reported past-12-months gambling was the independent variable of interest. Chi squares and adjusted odds-ratios were computed to determine gambling associations with demographic variables, substance-use, and violence-related measures, and whether associations were different between genders. Among students, 18.6% reported gambling. Reported gambling in males and females associated with lifetime use of any drugs, marijuana, cocaine, inhalants, heroin, methamphetamines, ecstasy, synthetic marijuana, non-medical pain-relievers, and injected drugs, in addition to past-30-days cigarette smoking, alcohol and heavy alcohol drinking, and marijuana use. Gambling associated with reported weapon-carrying, being threatened or injured with a weapon, forced sexual intercourse, bullying, and electronic bullying in males; physical dating violence in females; and physical fighting and sexual dating violence in both groups. Gambling and gender interaction terms did not associate with outcome measures except synthetic marijuana use, which trended towards significance (P = 0.052). Gambling in adolescence was similarly linked to risk behaviors involving substance-use in males and females, though gambling relationships with different violence-measures varied between genders. Assessing gambling behavior may be important for targeted preventions focused on adolescents at risk for substance-use disorder and physical violence.
引用
收藏
页码:1301 / 1324
页数:23
相关论文
共 272 条
[1]  
Barnes GM(2015)Gambling and substance use: Co-occurrence among adults in a recent general population study in the United States International Gambling Studies 15 55-71
[2]  
Welte JW(2015)Are we overpathologizing everyday life? A tenable blueprint for behavioral addiction research Journal of Behavioral Addictions 4 119-123
[3]  
Tidwell M-CO(2006)Sex differences in subclinical and DSM-IV pathological gambling: Results from the national epidemiologic survey on alcohol and related conditions Psychological Medicine 36 943-953
[4]  
Hoffman JH(2014)Synthetic cannabinoid use among patients in residential substance use disorder treatment: Prevalence, motives, and correlates Drug and Alcohol Dependence 143 268-271
[5]  
Billieux J(2016)Gambling type, substance abuse, health and psychosocial correlates of male and female problem gamblers in a nationally representative French sample Journal of Gambling Studies 45 543-550
[6]  
Schimmenti A(2009)Adolescents’ nonmedical use of prescription medications and other problem behaviors Journal of Adolescent Health 22 263-274
[7]  
Khazaal Y(2006)Pre/early adolescent onset of gambling and psychosocial problems in treatment-seeking pathological gamblers Journal of Gambling Studie 33 397-424
[8]  
Maurage P(2017)Prevalence of adolescent problem gambling: A systematic review of recent research Journal of Gambling Studies 29 813-823
[9]  
Heeren A(2015)How do impulsivity traits influence problem gambling through gambling motives? The role of perceived gambling risk/benefits Psychology of Addictive Behaviors 60 1487-1492
[10]  
Blanco C(2011)Vital signs: Overdoses of prescription opioid pain relievers-United States, 1999–2008 MMWR. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 22 373-392