Middleboro Remembers
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
High stakes indeed: Gambling with lives
High stakes indeed: Gambling with lives
Naomi Fryers
23 May 2016,
Naomi Fryers
examines the relationship between problem gambling and suicide in Australia.
A
STUDY
carried out at
Flinders Medical Centre
in 2006 found that 81.4 per cent of participants in a gambling addiction study displayed signs of suicidal ideation.
Reports
in 2010 revealed that almost one in five suicidal patients seen by the
Alfred Hospital
’s emergency department was a problem gambler. A
Lifeline
spokesperson has confirmed to
Independent Australia
that compounding financial pressures often result in calls through to their services.
In 2013, a State Coroner’s report
found
that, over a decade, 128 Victorians committed suicide after losing their battle with gambling addiction.
Clearly, community-wide vulnerabilities are a cause for concern, particularly given that gambling, as an industry, is growing.
Seven Australians
lose their lives to suicide
each day — an average outweighing our national road toll. We also
spend
$20 billion dollars per year on gambling – a figure that increases each year – and is one of the nation’s largest revenue raisers.
Despite this, there has been limited research, or media coverage, on the relationship between problem gambling and suicide in Australia, hindering public discourse on potential reforms. It could be argued that, without a commitment from the government to actively investigate the matter, we may continue to count momentous and avoidable losses.
In November last year, the Federal Government released its mental health reform plans. One of the aims was to curb Australia’s suicide rate by tackling mental illness and depression. Around this time, Lifeline Australia chairperson,
John Brogden
, also called for Australia’s suicide rate to be declared a national emergency. However, while suicide statistics are firmly on the agenda, some of the underlying reasons for suicide, such as problem gambling, continue to go unaddressed.
The finding that 128 Victorians committed suicide after losing their battle with a gambling addiction may, in fact, be an underestimation of the problem, with some fatalities from the period still being investigated. In addition, coronial enquiries do not generally involve holistically addressing the underlying motives of a suicidal act, focusing instead on cause of death and ruling out suspicious circumstances. In order to address the causes of suicide and reduce the human cost, we must better examine the link between suicide and problem gambling.
Gambling is a growing industry and poor regulation processes may be perpetuating poor outcomes for problem gamblers.
Crown Casino
, in particular, has attracted the ire of anti-gambling groups interested in seeing the industry independently investigated and reformed. It was
reported
back in 2013 that 127 intentional overdoses or poisonings had seen paramedics called out to attend the venue in less than three years. Crown Casino has declined an invitation to comment on this matter. At the time, the Department of Health also did not make a representative available for comment on possible reforms.
Dr Mark Zirnsak
is the co-chair of the
Victoria Interchurch Gambling Taskforce
(a position he shares with the
Reverend Tim Costello
). In an interview with
Independent Australia
, Dr Zirnsak stressed the need for restricted opening hours of gambling venues and a reduction of betting limits. He also envisages a requirement whereby staff in gambling venues must intervene when someone shows signs of problem gambling. While he acknowledged the current regulations on gambling venues, he argued that they were “
not directed at reducing harm.
”
https://independentaustralia.net/life/life-display/high-stakes-indeed-gambling-with-lives,9021
No comments:
Post a Comment
‹
›
Home
View web version
No comments:
Post a Comment