IHE - The Swedish Institute for Health Economics, Box 2127, 22002, Lund, Sweden.
The Public Health Agency of Sweden, Box 505, 831 26, Östersund, Sweden.
BMC Public Health. 2020 Dec 18;20(1):1921. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-10008-9.
Problem gambling is a public health issue affecting both the gamblers, their families, their employers, and society as a whole. Recent law changes in Sweden oblige local and regional health authorities to invest more in prevention and treatment of problem gambling. The economic consequences of gambling, and thereby the potential economic consequences of policy changes in the area, are unknown, as the cost of problem gambling to society has remained largely unexplored in Sweden and similar settings.
A prevalence-based cost-of-illness study for Sweden for the year 2018 was conducted. A societal approach was chosen in order to include direct costs (such as health care and legal costs), indirect costs (such as lost productivity due to unemployment), and intangible costs (such as reduced quality of life due to emotional distress). Costs were estimated by combining epidemiological and unit cost data.
The societal costs of problem gambling amounted to 1.42 billion euros in 2018, corresponding to 0.30% of the gross domestic product. Direct costs accounted only for 13% of the total costs. Indirect costs accounted for more than half (59%) of the total costs, while intangible costs accounted for 28%. The societal costs were more than twice as high as the tax revenue from gambling in 2018. Direct and indirect costs of problem gambling combined amounted to one third of the equivalent costs of smoking and one sixth of the costs of alcohol consumption in Sweden.
Problem gambling is increasingly recognized as a public health issue. The societal costs of it are not negligible, also in relation to major public health issues of an addictive nature such as smoking and alcohol consumption. Direct costs for prevention and treatment are very low. A stronger focus on prevention and treatment might help to reduce many of the very high indirect and intangible costs in the future.
赌博问题是一个影响赌徒、他们的家人、雇主和整个社会的公共卫生问题。瑞典最近的法律变化要求地方和地区卫生当局在预防和治疗赌博问题上投入更多资金。由于赌博的经济后果,以及该领域政策变化的潜在经济后果,在瑞典和类似环境中,社会对赌博问题的成本仍然在很大程度上没有得到探索。
对瑞典 2018 年进行了基于患病率的疾病成本研究。选择了一种社会方法,以便包括直接成本(如医疗保健和法律费用)、间接成本(如失业导致的生产力损失)和无形成本(如因情绪困扰而降低的生活质量)。成本是通过结合流行病学和单位成本数据来估计的。
2018 年,瑞典赌博问题的社会成本为 14.2 亿欧元,占国内生产总值的 0.30%。直接成本仅占总成本的 13%。间接成本占总成本的一半以上(59%),而无形成本占 28%。社会成本是 2018 年赌博税收的两倍多。赌博的直接和间接成本合计占瑞典吸烟等效成本的三分之一,占饮酒成本的六分之一。
赌博问题越来越被视为一个公共卫生问题。它的社会成本不容忽视,与吸烟和饮酒等具有成瘾性的主要公共卫生问题相比也是如此。预防和治疗的直接成本非常低。更加强调预防和治疗可能有助于减少未来许多非常高的间接和无形成本。