The Gambler Addiction Index (GAI) is designed for gambler assessment, screening, or testing. The GAI has been standardized on people in treatment for gambling, probationers on gambler caseloads, and outpatient gambler groups. Gambling disorders includes pathological gambling, problem gambling, and relative or significant other of a person with a gambling problem. Oklahoma Association on Problem and Compulsive Gambling. Gamblers Anonymous. National Problem Gambling Helpline. Contact: 405-248-9200. 1-800-522-4700 - Problem Gambling Hotline.
Click HERE to download the complete survey.
This report presents the only national compilation of comprehensive information gathered about problem gambling services in the United States. Unlike other mental health and addiction services, there is no federal agency designated to fund and guide programs and policies addressing problem gambling in the U.S. This void has created the need for non-governmental entities to gather national data to better inform individual state efforts and track national trends. In 2006, the Association of Problem Gambling Service Administrators (APGSA) began sponsoring national problem gambling service surveys. This report is the fifth in the series and the second to be co-sponsored by the National Council on Problem Gambling (NCPG). NCPG spearheads efforts to address problem gambling at the national level, while state level efforts are primarily delegated to NCPG state-based affiliate chapters (referred to in this report as “Affiliates”).
The 2016 Survey of Problem Gambling Services in the United States included two surveys: one designed to collect information on publicly funded problem gambling services from the 50 states and the District of Columbia and, the other to capture information on problem gambling services delivered by NCPG Affiliates.
This effort represents the most comprehensive collection of information on problem gambling services in the United States. Information was gathered about the services funded by state agencies with legislated or line-item budgets identified for use in addressing problem gambling, and about efforts of NCPG Affiliates. Problem gambling services provided directly by entities such as tribal governments or state lotteries, privately funded entities such as health insurers or casino companies, and community organizations such as Gamblers Anonymous, were not collected in this survey.
The Association of Problem Gambling Service Administrators (APGSA) is the national non-profit membership organization of state administrators of public funds for problem gambling services. APGSA was formed in 2000 to “support the development of services that will reduce the impact of problem gambling.”
The National Council on Problem Gambling (NCPG) is a private non-profit organization founded in 1972 whose mission is to “lead state and national stakeholders in the development of comprehensive policy and programs for all those affected by problem gambling.” Both APGSA and NCPG offer state memberships and do not have a position for or against legalized gambling.
The total number of states that reported publicly funded problem gambling services increased from 35 in 2006, to 37 in 2010, to 39 in 2013, to 40 in 2016.
The objectives were to collect multi-purpose data that can be used to:
The total amount of public funding allocated for problem gambling services in the U.S. increased 20%, from $60.6 million in 2013 to $73.0 million in 2016; on a state-by-state basis, the amounts ranged from $0 (ten states plus the District of Columbia did not provide any dedicated funding for problem gambling services) to $8.47 million in California.
For those 40 states that invest in problem gambling services, per capita allocations for problem gambling services ranged from $0.01 in South Carolina to $1.46 in Delaware. The average per capita allocation for problem gambling services in the 40 states with publicly funded services was 37 cents. When the 10 states without dedicated funding are included, the national average drops to 23 cents per capita.
The average per capita funding level across all states with public funding increased between 2013 and 2016 from 32 cents to 37 cents. Since the 2013 survey, 25 states increased funding levels, seven had no change in funding, and nine reported cuts in their problem gambling service funding, including one state, Arkansas, that eliminated all funding.
At the time this survey was conducted, there were 33 states with active NCPG Affiliate Chapters. Other states had problem gambling councils without official NCPG affiliation and from this group two were included in the Affiliate survey (New Hampshire and Texas). NCPG Affiliate budgets were dramatically smaller than the state agency budgets in most states—including three states where Affiliates had less than $100 in revenue in state fiscal year 2016. The mean NCPG State Affiliate per capita budget was 13 cents and the median was three cents.
Increased state problem gambling service funding levels were significantly associated with:
Across all states, there is a lack of uniformity regarding what types of problem gambling services are funded. Among those states that fund problem gambling services, the most commonly supported services provided by state agencies and NCPG Affiliates were, respectively, problem gambling awareness programs, counselor training, helplines, and problem gambling treatment.
AWARENESS: Thirty-six public agencies and 33 NCPG Affiliates reported providing public awareness services. The most common methods of public awareness among state agencies were via website (38 states), printed material (33 states) and informational sessions (32 states). The most common public awareness efforts from Affiliates were informational sessions (27 states) and via social media (26 states).
In the U.S., substance use disorders are about 3.8 times more common than gambling disorders, while public funding for substance abuse treatment is about 334 times greater than public funding for all problem gambling services ($24.4 billion versus $73.0 million, respectively).
TREATMENT: In 2016, about one quarter of one percent of people (14,375) who needed gambling disorder treatment received publicly funded care from a gambling treatment specialist. These figures are revealing when compared to substance use treatment statistics that find 10.8 percent of people aged 12 or older (2.3 million people) who needed substance use treatment received treatment at a specialty facility in 2015. The average cost of problem gambling treatment, per client treatment episode, was $1,333 in 2016; by comparison, in 2006 the average cost of substance abuse treatment per client treatment episode was $1,583 (Etner et al., 2006), a figure that has likely risen. The only variable that was significantly associated with increases in gambling treatment utilization was higher spending on problem gambling services.
HELPLINE: The survey identified 30 organizations that operate problem gambling helpline numbers and/or call centers. It is common for more than one gambling helpline number to be marketed in the same state. “Calls for help”, defined as the number of problem gambling helpline callers requesting information about problem gambling including help resources, were significantly associated with higher levels of:
PREVENTION: This is the first year in which prevention activities have been specifically surveyed. Twenty three state agencies and 16 Affiliates reported providing prevention services. The most commonly reported prevention activities, shared by both state agencies and NCPG Affiliates, were problem identification and referral (21 state agencies and 15 Affiliates), coalition building (17 state agencies and 14 Affiliates), and policy change efforts (14 state agencies and 13 Affiliates).
RESEARCH & EVALUATION: Results of each of the past four National Problem Gambling Services Surveys indicate that spending on research and evaluation systems has been very low. In 2016, APGSA Survey respondents reported an average of 1.8% of their budgets was spent on “research” (defined as prevalence studies, risk behavior surveys, issue research), and an average of 1.7% was spent on program evaluation.
STRENGTHS & NEEDS: When asked to rate a list of 10 possible strengths of their state’s problem gambling system, the collaborative relationship between the state agency administering problem gambling programs with the state Affiliate had the highest average rating, followed by having protected funds for problem gambling services. When asked to rate a list of needs, the highest average rating was for improved integration of problem gambling into behavioral health services, followed by national guidance on best practices to address daily fantasy sports and other forms of internet-based gambling. Fifty-seven percent (57%) of state agency key informants rated the need for increased funding as “very needed” or “critically needed,” compared to 83% of Affiliate key informants. The gaps in prevention services most listed by states, both by state agencies and NCPG affiliates, were 1) funding, 2) community readiness (low awareness of problem), and 3) staffing and coordination.
Only 17 states funded one or more full-time state employee positions dedicated to administering problem gambling programs.
Gambling is one of the few activities that the United States federal government has largely left alone from a regulatory standpoint, as gambling regulation has for the most part been left up to state and local governments. Correspondingly, the U.S. federal government does not provide states with funds to address problem gambling and disallows states from funding problem gambling treatment with the federal funds invested in substance use disorder treatment ($14.7 billion in 2016). The result is poor funding for problem gambling services and a patchwork of gambling-related policies and programs across the United States.
In many states, efforts to garner support for gambling expansion have resulted in language to address problem gambling within legislative measures, which typically offer to dedicate a portion of gambling revenues, taxes, or fees to fund problem gambling service efforts. Less commonly, political controversy over legalized gambling and public concerns have motivated state agencies and/or state legislatures to use non-gambling related funds to support problem gambling services. Some states, such as Alaska, Hawaii and Utah, offer few, if any, legalized gambling opportunities and therefore seem less motivated to develop specialty services and programs to address problem gambling.
Results from this survey found a positive correlation between the number of dollars gambled within a state, the amount of state revenue derived from gambling, and the level of funding for problem gambling services. However, on a state by state basis the relationships between these variables was not always present. This survey found the amount of dedicated funding for problem gambling programs in 2016 varied greatly, including 10 states that did not provide any dedicated funding. The consequence of disparate funding levels for problem gambling services across states is that there are extremely uneven levels of services for individuals with gambling problems across the country.
In states that do not fund specialized gambling treatment services, key informants stated that individuals with a gambling disorder who did not have coverage through private insurance were either referred to community supports like Gamblers Anonymous, or served within their publicly funded mental health and addictions treatment systems. Because few problem gamblers present for treatment, most mental health and addiction profession generalists have little to no experience working with problem gamblers. Conversely, most states with line-itemed problem gambling budgets have invested in training a workforce and developing an infrastructure to treat problem gamblers and implement problem gambling prevention and awareness programs. Thus, problem gamblers living in states without dedicated funds to address problem gambling are less likely to obtain the help they need to produce good outcomes.
Findings from this survey support the need to develop federal funding and guidelines that can fill gaps in America’s safety net for problem gamblers and begin to address health service disparities for preventing and treating problem gambling.
Issue | Title | |
Vol 44: Spring 2020 | Evaluating the Reliability and Validity of the Short Gambling Harm Screen: Are Binary Scales worse than Likert Scales at capturing Gambling Harm? | |
James McLauchlan, Matthew Browne, Alex M T Russell, Matthew Rockloff | ||
Vol 44: Spring 2020 | Validating the GMQ-F in a Canadian Sample of University Students | |
Jason Pchajek, Jason D Edgerton, Lance W Roberts | ||
Vol 44: Spring 2020 | Gambling Data and Modalities of Interaction for Responsible Online Gambling: A Qualitative Study | |
George Drosatos, Emily Arden-Close, Elvira Bolat, Raian Ali | ||
Vol 42: Fall 2019 | Hey Big Spender: An Ecological Momentary Assessment of Sports and Race Betting Expenditure by Gambler Characteristics | |
Nerilee Hing, Alex MT Russell, Anna Thomas, Rebecca Jenkinson | ||
Vol 43: Winter 2019/20 | A Review of Sports Wagering: Prevalence, Characteristics of Sports Bettors, and Association with Problem Gambling | |
Ken C Winters, Jeffrey L Derevensky | ||
Vol 44: Spring 2020 | Opportunity Cost and Gambling: Distinguishing Between Competing Activities and Harm | |
Paul Delfabbro, Daniel King, Neophytos Georgiou | ||
Vol 42: Fall 2019 | Reflections on Poverty, Homelessness and Problem Gambling: Discoveries from a World Cafe | |
Julia Woodhall-Melnik, Sarah Hamilton-Wright, Sara JT Guilcher, Aklilu Wendaferew, Andrée Schuler, Flora I Matheson | ||
Vol 42: Fall 2019 | Powerless yet powerful: The duality of everyday life of partners of persons with gambling problems | |
Trude Klevan, Vibeke Krane, Bente Weimand | ||
Vol 45: Fall 2020 | Potential sources of bias in the reporting and interpretation of gambling research findings | |
Paul Delfabbro, Daniel King, Alex Blaszczynski | ||
Vol 45: Fall 2020 | House-edge information yields lower subjective chances of winning than equivalent return-to-player percentages: New evidence from support forum participants | |
Philip W.S. Newall, Lukasz Walasek, Elliot A. Ludvig, Matthew J. Rockloff | ||
Vol 41: Spring 2019 | Trends in gambling behavior among college student-athletes: A comparison of 2004, 2008, 2012 and 2016 NCAA survey data | |
Jérémie Richard, Thomas S Paskus, Jeffrey L Derevensky | ||
Vol 33: Fall 2016 | The Efficacy of Individual Community Reinforcement and Family Training (CRAFT) for Concerned Significant Others of Problem Gamblers | |
Nicole Nayoski, David C. Hodgins | ||
Vol 45: Fall 2020 | Win Big Fast! An Evaluation of Mobile Applications Available in Australia for Problem Gambling | |
Kelly Ridley, Amy Wiltshire, Mathew Coleman | ||
Vol 44: Spring 2020 | COVID-19 and Gambling in Ontario | |
Nigel E Turner | ||
Vol 44: Spring 2020 | Gambling in Prisons – A Nationwide Polish Study of Sentenced Men | |
Bernadeta Lelonek-Kuleta | ||
No 11 (2004) | How do slot machines and other electronic gambling machines actually work? | |
Nigel Turner, Roger Horbay | ||
Vol 41: Spring 2019 | Consumer Perspectives of a Multi-Venue Gambling Self-Exclusion Program: A Qualitative Process Analysis | |
Dylan Pickering, Zhenzhen Nong, Sally M Gainsbury, Alex Blaszczynski | ||
No 19 (2007) | A study of differences in Canadian university students' gambling and proximity to a casino | |
Gerald R. Adams, Anne-Marie Sullivan, Keith D. Horton, Rosanne Menna, Ann Marie Guilmette | ||
Vol 41: Spring 2019 | Are General and Activity-Specific PGSI Scores Consistent? | |
Eva Monson, Sylvia Kairouz, Matthew Perks, Nicole Arsenault | ||
No 18 (2006) | Prevalence estimates of gambling and problem gambling among 13- to 15-year-old adolescents in Reykjavík: An examination of correlates of problem gambling and different accessibility to electronic gambling machines in Iceland | |
Daníel Thor Ólason, Guđmundur A. Skarphedinsson, Johanna Ella Jonsdottir, Mikael Mikaelsson, Sigurdur J. Gretarsson | ||
Vol 45: Fall 2020 | The Efficacy of Personalized Feedback Interventions Delivered via Smartphone among At-Risk College Student Gamblers | |
Nicholas W. McAfee, Matthew P. Martens, Tracy E. Herring, Stephanie K. Takamatsu, Joanna M. Foss | ||
Vol 41: Spring 2019 | Gambling Among Emerging Adults: How Gender and Risk Level Influence Associated Problem Behaviours | |
Matthew D Sanscartier, Jack Shen, Jason D Edgerton | ||
No 13 (2005) | Change and continuity in a help-seeking problem gambling population: A five-year record* | |
Alun C. Jackson, Shane A. Thomas, Tangerine A. Holt, Neil Thomason | ||
No 23 (2009) | An evaluation of two United Kingdom online support forums designed to help people with gambling issues | |
Richard T.A. Wood, Sabrina A. Wood | ||
No 18 (2006) | An overview of prevalence surveys of problem and pathological gambling in the Nordic countries | |
Jakob Jonsson | ||
No 17 (2006) | Reducing the moral jeopardy associated with receiving funds from the proceeds of gambling | |
Peter J. Adams, Fiona Rossen | ||
No 22 (2008) | Inconsistency between concept and measurement: The Canadian Problem Gambling Index (CPGI) | |
Elena Svetieva, Michael Walker | ||
No 17 (2006) | Impacting attitudes towards gambling: A prison gambling awareness and prevention program | |
Gary Nixon, Gordon Leigh, Nadine Nowatzki | ||
No 16 (2006) | Faro: A 19th-century gambling craze | |
Nigel E. Turner, Mark Howard, Warren Spence | ||
Vol 31: Fall 2015 | Validation of the Gambling Perceived Stigma Scale (GPSS) and the Gambling Experienced Stigma Scale (GESS) | |
Phillip Donaldson, Erika Langham, Talitha Best, Matthew Browne | ||
No 16 (2006) | Gambling and problem gambling in a sample of university students | |
Robert J. Williams, Dennis Connolly, Robert T. Wood, Nadine Nowatzki | ||
No 20 (2007) | Mapping the prevalence of problem gambling and its association with treatment accessibility and proximity to gambling venues | |
Brian Rush, Scott Veldhuizen, Edward Adlaf | ||
No 27 (2012) | Shame-prone gamblers and their coping with gambling loss | |
Sunghwan Yi | ||
Vol 43: Winter 2019/20 | A report from the Global Gaming Expo in Las Vegas, Oct. 15, 2019: Updates on Innovations and Gambling Technology | |
Nigel E Turner | ||
No 20 (2007) | Selling dreams-causing nightmares? | |
Per Binde | ||
No 18 (2006) | Treatment of problem & pathological gambling in the Nordic countries: Where we are now and where do we go next? | |
Marianne Hansen | ||
Vol 33: Fall 2016 | Cognitive Behavioural Group Therapy for Problem Gamblers who Gamble over the Internet: A Controlled Study | |
Nicholas Harris, Dwight Mazmanian | ||
No 23 (2009) | Gambling as a public health issue: The critical role of the local environment | |
David Marshall | ||
No 18 (2006) | Chasing the criteria: Comparing SOGS-RA and the Lie/Bet screen to assess prevalence of problem gambling and 'at-risk' gambling among adolescents | |
Ingeborg Rossow, Helge Molde | ||
Vol 33: Fall 2016 | Motivation-Matched Approach to the Treatment of Problem Gambling: A Case Series Pilot Study | |
Melissa J. Stewart, Parnell L. Davis MacNevin, David C. Hodgins, Sean P. Barrett, Jennifer Swansburg, Sherry H. Stewart | ||
No 9 (2003) | The face of Chinese migrants' gambling: A perspective from New Zealand | |
John Wong, Samson Tse | ||
No 23 (2009) | Gamblers Anonymous and the 12 Steps: How an informal society has altered a recovery process in accordance with the special needs of problem gamblers | |
Peter Ferentzy, Wayne Skinner, Paul Antze | ||
Vol 33: Fall 2016 | Addressing the Needs of Problem Gamblers With Co-Morbid Issues: Policy and Service Delivery Approaches | |
Kathya Martyres, Phil Townshend | ||
No 7 (2002) | Online help for problem gambling: Why it is and is not being considered | |
Gerry Cooper, Guy Doucet | ||
Vol 33: Fall 2016 | Parental and peer influences on emerging adult problem gambling: Does exposure to problem gambling reduce stigmatizing perceptions and increase vulnerability? | |
Jessica Gay, Peter Richard Gill, Denise Corboy | ||
No 22 (2008) | A thematic analysis identifying concepts of problem gambling agency: With preliminary exploration of discourses in selected industry and research documents | |
Jennifer Borrell | ||
Vol 33: Fall 2016 | Parent problem gambling: A systematic review of prevention programs for children | |
Toula Kourgiantakis, Sasha Stark, Daniela S S. Lobo, Lorne Tepperman | ||
No 21 (2008) | How working in a gaming venue can lead to problem gambling: The experiences of six gaming venue staff | |
Nerilee Hing, Helen Breen | ||
Vol 32: Spring 2016 | The Social Side of the Pathways Model: Examining the Mediation of Social Support on the Relationship between Psychopathology and Problem Gambling | |
Mark van der Maas | ||
No 21 (2008) | A cognitive-behavioral analysis of Gamblers Anonymous | |
Tony Toneatto | ||
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Copyright © 2020 Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Editor-in-chief: Nigel E. Turner, Ph.D.
Managing Editor:Vivien Rekkas, Ph.D. (contact)