Lloyd Joanne, Penfold Katy L, Chadwick Darren David, Nicklin Laura Louise, Hinton Daniel P, Dinos Sokratis
School of Education and Psychology, University of Wolverhampton, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom.
School of Psychology, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
Front Psychol. 2025 Jun 18;16:1613798. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1613798. eCollection 2025.
Stigma is associated with psychological distress and can act as a barrier to help-seeking for people who experience gambling harms. While research into intersectional stigma within this population is scarce, this may be exacerbated for those from multiply-marginalised groups.
This study used an online survey with 'vignette' design to capture attitudes of 3,567 adults in Great Britain towards hypothetical individuals experiencing gambling harms alongside a variety of other potentially stigmatised characteristics (minority ethnicity, LGBTQ status; low-income status; chronic drug/alcohol use; and mental health difficulties). Questions about participants' own demographic characteristics, their contact with and experience of gambling/gambling harms, and their beliefs about the nature and origin of gambling harms were also administered.
Significantly greater desire for social distance from protagonists experiencing gambling harms than those described as gambling recreationally ( < 0.05) indicated the presence of public stigma, and this was further elevated ( < 0.05) when the protagonist was described as having difficulties with drug and alcohol use. The other potentially stigmatised characteristics were not associated with an additional increase in stigma, and potential reasons for this are discussed. Perceived disruptiveness and harmfulness of the protagonist, along with beliefs that gambling harms are due to bad character and difficult to recover from, were all significant predictors of desire for social distance - as were lower levels of prior contact with gambling harms (all < 0.05).
These findings have utility for stigma reduction interventions, and can also inform those working with people experiencing gambling harms.
耻辱感与心理困扰相关,可能会成为经历赌博危害的人寻求帮助的障碍。虽然对这一人群中交叉耻辱感的研究很少,但对于那些来自多重边缘化群体的人来说,这种情况可能会更加严重。
本研究采用了带有“vignette”设计的在线调查,以了解3567名英国成年人对假设的经历赌博危害的个体以及各种其他可能受到污名化特征(少数族裔、LGBTQ身份、低收入状况、长期药物/酒精使用以及心理健康问题)的态度。还询问了参与者自身的人口统计学特征、他们与赌博/赌博危害的接触和经历,以及他们对赌博危害的性质和根源的看法。
与被描述为娱乐性赌博的人相比,对经历赌博危害的主角有明显更大的社交距离渴望(<0.05),这表明存在公众耻辱感,当主角被描述为有药物和酒精使用问题时,这种耻辱感进一步加剧(<0.05)。其他可能受到污名化的特征与耻辱感的额外增加无关,并讨论了其潜在原因。对主角的感知干扰性和危害性,以及认为赌博危害是由于性格不好且难以恢复的信念,都是社交距离渴望的重要预测因素——与之前与赌博危害的接触水平较低一样(均<0.05)。
这些发现对减少耻辱感干预措施有实用价值,也可为与经历赌博危害的人打交道的人提供参考。