Department of Psychology, Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT, 05753, USA.
Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services, Problem Gambling Services, Middletown, CT, 06457, USA.
J Gambl Stud. 2020 Dec;36(4):1301-1324. doi: 10.1007/s10899-020-09931-8.
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.
本研究系统地考察了男性和女性青少年的赌博史与物质使用和暴力相关措施之间的联系,并在具有代表性的青少年风险行为监测数据中比较了性别之间的关联差异。在康涅狄格州,对 2425 名 9 至 12 年级的学生进行了一项匿名调查,以评估影响健康的风险行为。过去 12 个月的赌博是本研究关注的自变量。使用卡方检验和调整后的优势比来确定赌博与人口统计学变量、物质使用和暴力相关措施的关联,以及性别之间的关联是否存在差异。在学生中,18.6%的人报告有赌博行为。男性和女性报告的赌博与终生使用任何毒品、大麻、可卡因、吸入剂、海洛因、冰毒、摇头丸、合成大麻素、非医疗用途止痛药和注射药物有关,此外还有过去 30 天的吸烟、饮酒和大量饮酒以及大麻使用。赌博与男性报告的携带武器、被武器威胁或受伤、强迫性行为、欺凌和电子欺凌有关;与女性的身体约会暴力有关;与两组的身体打架和性约会暴力有关。除了合成大麻素的使用有趋势显著(P=0.052)外,赌博和性别交互项与结果测量无关。青少年时期的赌博与男性和女性的物质使用风险行为相似相关,但赌博与不同暴力措施的关系在性别之间存在差异。评估赌博行为可能对于针对有物质使用障碍和身体暴力风险的青少年的目标预防措施很重要。