SWEDEN – Health authority’s latest survey figures suggest the majority of Swedes with a gambling addiction are women.
The report found there was no longer a gender gap among gamblers, wherein half were women. And among the 45,000 people with a problem severe enough to be considered a gambling addiction, 64% were women. That is up from just 18% in 2015 with the surge widely being attributed to the increase in online gambling. The survey of 5,000 people found that overall number of problem gamblers had dropped since the last analysis published in 2015.
But at the same time, there was a 50% increase in problem gamblers, the category in which the gender gap vanished. The number of women with a gambling problem had been increasing over the past 10 years, the public health agency said.
Ulla Romild, the investigator behind the report, said that despite the drop in overall numbers, it was “worrying” that serious problems were increasing “and that we see an increase among women.”
“Our focus is broader than only people being dependent on gambling,” she said. “We are more interested in a larger group experiencing harm or a combination of people with moderate risk and gambling problems,”
That group contains more than 100,000 people just under 1.5% of Sweden’s population. Another 225,000, just below 3% of the population have some risk of becoming problem gamblers.
Report highlights the increasing amount of gambling done online, and the “new game forms” on the internet which changes gaming patterns.
Professor Anders Håkansson from Lund University, a specialist in gambling addiction, told Radio Sweden that this could be one explanation for the rise in women gambling.
“We have to consider the face that the gambling market is very different now mainly with the high proportion of gambling happening online,” he said.