Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The British Gambling Prevalence Survey is a large-scale nationally representative survey of participation in gambling and the prevalence of problem gambling in Great Britain. The aims of the survey series are:measure the prevalence of participation in all forms of commercial and private gambling (including estimates of expenditure and information on venue)estimate the prevalence of ‘problem gambling’ and look at which activities have the highest prevalence of ‘problem gamblers’ investigate the socio-demographic factors associated with gambling and with ‘problem gambling’assess attitudes towards gamblingFurther information about the series can be found on the Gambling Commission's British Gambling Prevalence Surveys web pages.
British Gambling Prevalence Survey, 2007 is the second survey in the series and was undertaken to help the Gambling Commission understand the nature and scale of gambling in Great Britain at a point before the Gambling Act 2005 was implemented on 1 September 2007. It was commissioned as part of the Gambling Commission’s commitment to the licensing objectives of keeping crime out of gambling, ensuring gambling is conducted fairly and openly, and protecting children and vulnerable people from harm from gambling. The questionnaire asked respondents to record whether they had gambled on a range of activities in the past year and past week. Past gamblers were asked questions pertaining to venues for gambling and how much they won or lost on each activity. Two problem gambling screens were included within the questionnaire to assess the extent to which people experience problems with their gambling and a range of attitudinal and socio-demographic questions were also included.
Main Topics:
The main topics covered were:participation in gambling in the past 12 months (module A)participation in gambling in the past 7 days (module B)problem gambling screens (module C)attitudes to gambling (module D)health, lifestyle and socio-demographic questions (module E)
Multi-stage stratified random sample
Face-to-face interview
Self-completion
Email survey