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Evidence Base

Co-morbidity of gambling and Internet use among Internet and land-based gamblers: classic and network approaches

Publication details

Year: 2016
DOI: 10.1080/14459795.2016.1242148
Issued: 2016
Language: English
Volume: 16
Issue: 3
Start Page: 499
End Page: 515
Editors:
Authors: Baggio S.; Gainsbury S.M.; Berchtold A.; Iglesias K.
Type: Journal article
Journal: International Gambling Studies
Topics: Wellbeing; Risks and harms; Other
Sample: 2122 French and 3134 Swiss (post-compulsory students from Canton Bern) 17 year-olds
Implications For Policy Makers About: Stepping up awareness and empowerment
Implications For Stakeholders About: Researchers; Healthcare

Abstract

This study investigated co-morbidity of problem gambling and problematic Internet use (PIU) among adolescent Internet and land-based gamblers, with the classic approach using sum-scores of symptoms and a promising new method, namely the network perspective. This perspective allows testing for how multiple disorders are associated, showing symptoms overlap and centralities. We used cross-sectional data from two population-based samples of adolescents aged 17 years in France (n = 2,240) and Switzerland (n = 944). Measures included Internet gambling, problem gambling and PIU. The classic approach showed that Internet gambling was associated with increased levels of disordered gambling and PIU, but that correlations between disorders were weak (R2 min = 3.2%, R2 max = 17.6%). The network perspective showed that the co-morbid network of Internet gamblers was more connected in comparison with land-based gamblers. Problem gambling and PIU appeared as separate disorders, but their relationship was increased among Internet gamblers in comparison with land-based gamblers. The network perspective appeared as a promising avenue for a better understanding of addictive disorders, but it should not replace the classic approach, which showed increased levels of addictive behaviours among Internet gamblers.

Outcome

"The study showed that Internet gambling was associated with increased behavioural addictions (PIU and problem gambling), as well as a stronger relationship between disorders in comparison with land-based gambling. Both the classic approach and network perspective were useful to understand the co-morbidity between these two disorders." (Baggio et al. 2016, p. 512)
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