Sian Griffiths has called on the new Labour government to “course-correct the situation and deliver regulation that is fit for today’s world”.
UK.- Professor Sian Griffiths, GambleAware’s new chair of trustees, has urged the new Labour government to develop a “comprehensive national strategy” on gambling harm. She said the General Election betting scandal involving Conservative politicians was a “stark reminder of how normalised gambling has become in our society”.
Writing in PoliticsHome, the former faculty president of Public Health England (PHE), said: “In Britain, up to 4.8 million people experience harm from their own or someone else’s gambling.”
She called on the government to update the Gambling Act of 2005, which was introduced during a previous Labour government, arguing that the liberalisation of gambling that it allowed had led to catastrophic impacts. She raised particular concern about problem gambling impacts on women, marginalised communities, ethnic minorities and young adults.
She noted that one in seven 18 to 24-year-olds is estimated to be affected and that people in deprived and ethnic minority communities are twice as likely to experience harm.
“The incoming Labour government now has the opportunity to course-correct the situation and deliver regulation that is fit for today’s world,” Griffiths said.
A study led by Swansea University has indicated that showing people a counter-advertising video increased their resistance to gambling advertisements.
A report, commissioned by GambleAware, has found that electronic gaming machines (EGMs) and online casino games pose the highest risks of gamblin
The study, commissioned by GambleAware, focused on the effects of different gaming environments. The research involved more than 40,000 participants fro
A fraudulent tradesman from Whitstable, who swindled nearly £65,000 from customers and gambled it away, has been sentenced to 18 month