Gambling Harm Experienced by Children of Parents Who Gamble
Gambling Harm Experienced by Children of Parents Who Gamble
Gambling Harm Experienced by Children of Parents Who Gamble
Gambling harm
experienced by children
of parents who gamble
June 2021
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Gambling harm experienced by
children of parents who gamble
June 2021
Acknowledgements
We would like to acknowledge the funding for this project from the Victorian Responsible Gambling
Foundation, and our study advisory group who were spread across three continents. We would
also sincerely like to thank the individuals who participated in our online survey, particularly those
who also shared their experiences in the qualitative interviews.
Approach ....................................................................................................................16
References .................................................................................................................60
Appendices ................................................................................................................68
1. What are the key areas of child wellbeing that are affected by parental problem gambling
according to previous literature? (Stage 1)
3. To what extent does parental gambling severity and other family factors (parenting, problem
gambling exposure) predict the degree and type of gambling harm experienced by children?
(Stage 2)
4. In what ways does exposure to gambling harm in childhood relate to outcomes later in life,
including general health and psychological wellbeing? (Stage 2)
5. How do individuals exposed to gambling harm due to parental gambling as a child perceive
the link between parental gambling behaviours and their own wellbeing? (Stage 3)
RQ1: What are the key areas of child wellbeing that are affected by parental
problem gambling according to previous literature?
The UK framework was modified to better reflect the existing empirical evidence pertaining to key
areas of child wellbeing: (1) intergenerational transmission of problem gambling; (2) financial
problems; (3) psychological/emotional problems; (4) relationship problems (within the family); (5)
family violence (a specific type of relationship problem); (6) behavioural problems; and (7)
physical health problems. This section synthesised a large body of literature examining the
Method
The Stage 2 sample was recruited via convenience sampling from the general Australian
population (62.2 per cent females, aged 18–85 years, mean age 46.8 years). These individuals
were: (1) lifetime regular gamblers (50 per cent) who were asked to provide insights into how their
gambling was affecting their children; (2) adults who had been children in households where
parents were lifetime regular gamblers (56.3 per cent); (3) spouses of lifetime regular gamblers
(34.7 per cent) who were asked to report on how their partner’s gambling was affecting children in
the household; and (4) people who had never gambled regularly nor had a parent or spouse who
gambled regularly (14.3 per cent, these participants were used as a control group for the study).
Participants were from every Australian State and Territory, but mostly from Victoria (36.7 per
cent) then New South Wales (28.2 per cent), Queensland (17.0 per cent), Australian Capital
Territory (6.9 per cent), South Australia (4.1 per cent), Tasmania (2.8 per cent), Western Australia
(2.4 per cent) and the Northern Territory (2.0 per cent). Of the initial sample, 74 per cent
completed the survey.
The Qualtrics online survey used for Stage 2 data collection included three sections: (1) gambling
questions; (2) impact of parental gambling on child; and (3) current health and wellbeing of the
participant. The analyses directly responded to Research Questions 2, 3 and 4. To examine
specific harms experienced by adult children of gamblers directly attributable to parental
gambling, the study used Alcohol’s Harm to Children adaptation for gambling context (referred to
as Gambling Harm to Children) to examine eight types of harm to children as a direct result of
parental gambling: (i) physical abuse; (ii) verbal abuse; (iii) left unsupervised; (iv) not having
enough money; (v) witnessing violence; (vi) child welfare call (child protection services or family
welfare services contact); (vii) distress or upset; and (viii) problems in family relationship.
RQ2: Are gambling harms experienced by children exposed to parental gambling (including
problem gambling) reported differently across three groups of respondents: (i) regular gamblers,
(ii) adult children of regular gamblers and (iii) spouses of regular gamblers?
- People with gambling problems themselves reported the lowest rates of harm to
children, followed by spouses of people with gambling problems. Children exposed to
parental gambling reported the highest proportions of each type of gambling harm to
children.
- The most common type of gambling harm to children reported by parents (gamblers
and spouses of gamblers) was financial harm (e.g., not having enough money). The
most common types of gambling harm reported by adult children of parents who
gambled, however, was feeling distressed and having poorer family relationships
To address Research Question 3, a further multivariate analysis based on data from 190
participants who were (adult) children of regular gamblers (including both problem and non-
problem gamblers) was then employed to examine the factors associated with specific types of
gambling harm to children.
RQ3: To what extent does parental gambling severity and other family factors (parenting,
problem gambling exposure) predict the degree and type of gambling harm experienced by
children?
After adjusting for family of origin and demographic factors, logistic regressions showed that parental
gambling severity and responsive parenting significantly predicted each type of gambling harm to children
item with the following results.
- Lower parental problem gambling scores and higher responsive parenting scores
were associated with a decreased likelihood of each gambling harm item with the
exception of ‘child welfare call’ item.
- Being born in Australia (compared to born overseas) decreased the likelihood of two
harm items: physical abuse and lack of money due to parental gambling.
- The presence of another gambling parent increased the likelihood of being left
unsupervised due to parental gambling.
The final part of the Stage 2 analysis addressed Research Question 4 by examining the
association between parental gambling exposure as a child and current wellbeing.
RQ4: In what ways does exposure to gambling harm in childhood relate to outcomes later in
life, including general health and psychological wellbeing?
- Child welfare calls due to parental gambling significantly related to higher depression
symptoms in children of regular gamblers when they were adults.
- Experiences of verbal and physical abuse due to parental gambling as a child were
significantly related to higher PTSD symptoms in children of regular gamblers when
they were adults.
- Maternal gambling (but not paternal gambling) as a child was significantly associated
with higher rates of current IPV perpetration and gambling severity in adult children of
regular gamblers (including problem gamblers).
RQ5: How do individuals exposed to gambling harm due to parental gambling as a child
perceive the link between parental gambling behaviours and their own wellbeing?
Method
Participants for the qualitative interviews were recruited from the online survey and they were a
subsample of 20 adult children of gamblers who had experienced harm as a direct consequence
of their parent’s gambling under the age of 18 years (as measured by Gambling Harm to Children
scale). The participants were mostly female (80 per cent) and between 19 and 48 years of age,
The telephone interviews asked questions about the most common ways in which parental
gambling affects children, allowing participants to elaborate on own personal experiences about
specific impacts of parental gambling. The types of themes related to the negative impacts of
parental gambling the participants discussed were: (1) family conflict and child abuse; (2) parental
absence; (3) financial impact; (4) psychological impact; (5) impact on child-parent relationship; (6)
intergenerational transmission of problem gambling and; (7) educational impacts.
- Family conflict, parental fighting, and child abuse (both verbal and physical) were
often directly attributed to gambling problems in the families. Financial strain and
absence from family responsibilities, in particular, contributed to conflict and
violence between parents.
- Most participants had experienced serious mental health problems such as anxiety
and PTSD and many reported feeling angry and confused about parental gambling
as a child and those feelings had grown stronger towards adolescence and early
adulthood.
- Protective relationship with non-gambling parents and siblings buffered some of the
negative impacts of parental problem gambling, however, many participants had
taken on the responsibilities of parenting including family finances, household
chores, and looking after younger siblings.
Finally, parental problem gambling severity negatively predicted offspring problem gambling
severity. Adult children of gamblers who had experienced emotional distress and relationship
problems due to their parental gambling reported particularly low gambling severity for
themselves. The qualitative interviews provided further insights into this familial pattern: adult
children of gamblers who had experienced severe psychosocial impacts of parental gambling
were ‘put off’ by gambling as they did not want to expose their own spouses and children to
similar adversities they had experienced as a child. These results suggest that being exposed to
severe psychosocial consequences of parental gambling may act as a deterrent against
problematic gambling behaviours.
The current study highlights the need for more consistent approaches to the assessment and
treatment of children in families where gambling is a problem. Current evidence specifically
warrants more systematic identification of psychosocial wellbeing of children in problem gambling
families and provision of early and targeted interventions and catering for parenting needs. In
addition, raising public awareness about gambling harm on children could be used to engage
more parents into treatment. The results from the current study are consistent with previous
research showing that non-gambling spouses need a wide range of supports to minimise the
impact of parental gambling on children.
There is a need for better service coordination to address the harm from parental problem
gambling on children: family welfare services should have access to education and tools to
identify and address parental problem gambling in families, particularly in the presence of other
wellbeing factors such as family violence, mental health problems and other addictions. A high
level of integration of services encompassing assessment, referral, intervention, and post-
intervention support can be used to promote better outcomes for children living in problem
gambling families. The main limitations of the study include a small non-representative sample
Conclusion
The current project presents one of the few empirical studies focusing on the broad-ranging
correlates and impacts of parental problem gambling on their children. The current study provides
a comprehensive overview of the main areas of wellbeing affected by parental problem gambling
from the perspectives of the parents and children exposed to problematic gambling. It shows the
complex nature of negative family dynamics related to problem gambling but also highlights
multiple opportunities for supports and intervention that may improve the wellbeing of families and
children exposed to gambling harm.
From the above literature, it is clear that families of people with gambling problems often
experience dysfunction (Dowling, Suomi et al., 2016); however, research on the specific impacts
of gambling on child wellbeing is almost non‐existent. Dowling, Suomi et al. (2016) developed a
specific measure for the family impacts of gambling and found that that the most common
negative impacts mentioned by family members of gamblers were a loss of trust (63 per cent),
anger towards the gambler (61 per cent), depression or sadness (59 per cent), anxiety (58 per
cent), distress due to gambling‐related absences (56 per cent), reduced quality of time spent with
the gambler (52 per cent), and a breakdown in communication (52 per cent). This study was not
specifically designed to examine gambling impacts on children but it included interviews of
parents about the impacts of gambling on their children: “My children have gone without, there
are unpaid debts, we never had the money to go away” and “It has changed the way I
Children are seen to be more affected by adult gambling losses than gambling adults themselves
(Browne, Bellringer, Greer et al., 2017). Some research on concerned significant others of people
with gambling problems reports correlates of parental gambling and child wellbeing including child
emotional disturbances, child physical complaints and behavioural problems (Dickson‐Swift et al.,
2005; Hodgins, Shead & Makarchuk, 2007; Vitaro, Wanner, Brendgen & Tremblay, 2008).
Evidence of gambling harm for children include various types of neglect, staying up late, losing
sleep, missing school, being hungry, poor nutrition, and potential vulnerability to abuse through
lack of adequate supervision (Browne, Langham, Rawat et al., 2016). Taken together, this
evidence lays out a context and strong rationale for better understanding the specific
mechanisms of harm between parental gambling and child‐wellbeing.
Psychological/emotional problems
Previous literature shows mixed evidence about mental health problems in children exposed to
parental problem gambling. In Afifi et al.’s (2020) study, adult children of people with gambling
problems were 2.5 times more likely, and adolescent children 3.5 times more likely, to report
current mental health problems compared with offspring of people without gambling problems.
One large prospective study (Vitaro et al., 2008) showed significantly higher rates of depression in
children exposed to parental gambling problems at the age of 16 and 23 compared with those not
exposed. However, using different measures of depression as well as anxiety, Dowling, Smith et
al. (2009) did not find higher rates of depression or anxiety in the children of treatment-seeking
females with gambling problems compared to normative samples.
Other studies have drawn direct links between parental gambling problems and child mental
health. For example, Salonen and colleagues (2016) found that as many as 36 per cent of adult
children whose parents had gambling problems reported significant emotional distress, anxiety
and depression due to parental gambling and that this was the most common gambling harm
experienced by the children. Similarly, children of Gamblers Anonymous parents report feeling
depressed (56 per cent) and sad (68 per cent), angry (70 per cent) and confused (59 per cent)
about their parents’ gambling (Lesieur & Rothschild, 1989). In another early study (Lorenz &
Shuttlesworth, 1983), 13 per cent of spouses of people with gambling problems reported
significant mental effects on their children due to parental gambling. Dowling et al. (2014)
reported that children of treatment-seeking people with gambling problems were more likely to
report emotional distress from gambling compared to other types of impact (financial, social,
employment, relationship, physical health). Some evidence suggests an association between
children’s own addictions and exposure to problematic parental gambling, with about one-third of
children whose parents had gambling problems exhibiting problematic drug and alcohol use
(Jacobs et al., 1989).
Consistent with the quantitative studies, qualitative evidence shows evidence of ‘pervasive loss’
experienced by children, characterised by profound feelings of unhappiness, longstanding
psychological problems and considerable distress stemming from parental gambling (Darbyshire
et al., 2001a; Kalischuk, 2010; Landon, Grayson & Roberts, 2018; Mathews & Volberg, 2013;
Patford, 2007, Wurtzburg & Tan, 2011).
Relationship problems
A number of studies have examined the impact of parental problem gambling on family
relationships. Some of these studies have employed standardised scales to measure family
functioning in families where there is problem gambling, with mixed results. Black et al. (2012)
measured family functioning with the McMaster Family Assessment Device (Epstein, Baldwin &
Bishop, 1983) and found that family functioning was twice as likely to be rated as ‘unhealthy’ in
problem gambling families compared to non-problem gambling families. Similarly Dowling, Smith
et al. (2009) employed the Family Environment Scale (Moos & Moos, 1994) and reported that
parents in problem gambling families scored significantly lower on family cohesion, independence
and achievement orientation compared to normative samples. In a subsequent study by Dowling,
Rodda et al. (2014), children of treatment-seeking gamblers ranked gambling-related relational
and social harms as the second and fourth highest gambling-related harms.
A number of studies show that relational problems related to problem gambling in families with
children can also lead to family break down or other issues within the family system. Hing, Bree,
Gordon, and Russell (2014) reported that 14 per cent of Indigenous adult gamblers had lost
contact with their children as a result of family break up due to gambling problems. Jacobs et al.,
1989 showed that children with problem gambling parents experienced almost twice the
incidence of broken homes caused by separation or the death of a parent before the age of 15
years, and much higher rates of unhappy teen years compared to children with non-gambling
parents. Salonen et al. (2016) reported that a large proportion of adult children of people with
gambling problems (PG) (25 per cent if maternal PG; 15 per cent if paternal PG) reported
significant current relationship and interpersonal dysfunction due to their parent’s gambling.
Qualitative data have also revealed poor quality relationships between the gambling parent and
children (Dowling, Suomi, Jackson & Lavis, 2016; Downs & Woolrych, 2010; Eby et al., 2016) and
that the children exposed to parental gambling problems commonly experience a significant loss
of parental attention and affection, general insecurity and chaotic families (Kalischuk, 2010;
Landon et al., 2018; Mathews & Volberg, 2013, Wurtzburg & Tan, 2011). A lack of time with
children as a result of parental gambling problems is a specific harm towards children (Lorenz &
Yaffee, 1988; Lorenz & Yaffee 1989; Corney & Davis, 2010). Illustrating a similar pattern, Li,
Browne, Rawat et al. (2017) reported that people with gambling problems were more likely to
neglect their children’s needs and leave them unsupervised than people without gambling
problems.
Family violence
One the most severe consequences of gambling is the high rates of family violence in the families
of people with gambling problems (Afifi et al. 2010; Dowling, Jackson et al., 2014; Dowling, Ewin,
Youssef et al., 2018; Dowling, Oldenhof, Shandley et al., 2018; Dowling, Suomi, Jackson & Lavis,
2016; Dowling et al., 2019; Du Preez, Bellringer, Pearson et al., 2018; Suomi, Jackson, Dowling
A growing body of research also shows high rates of child abuse and/or perpetration of violence
against children in families of exposed to parental gambling problems (Afifi, Salmon, & Garcés,
2020; Bland, Newman, Orn & Stebelsky, 1993; Dowling et al., 2018; Dowling et al., 2014; Du
Preez et al., 2018; Landon et al., 2018; Lesieur & Rothschild, 1989; Lorenz & Shuttlesworth,
1989; Suomi et al., 2019). For example, it has been reported that problematic and pathological
gamblers are twice as likely to perpetrate child abuse than non-problematic gamblers (Afifi et al.,
2010; Dowling et al., 2018). Of the studies that report rates of child abuse, the lifetime
perpetration rates of child abuse by parents with gambling problems range from 17–43 per cent
(Afifi et al., 2010; Dowling et al., 2018; Lesieur & Rothschild, 1989; Lorenz & Shuttlesworth,
1983), and the past year perpetration rates range from 7 per cent to 18 per cent (Palmer Du
Preez et al., 2018; Dowling, Jackson et al., 2014; Suomi et al., 2019).
Behavioural problems
Behavioural problems among children exposed to parental gambling problems are common.
Lorenz and Shuttlesworth (1983) found that 25 per cent of children whose parents had gambling
problems exhibited significant behavioural or adjustment problems such as absconding,
committing crime and engaging in drug, alcohol, or gambling-related activities. In a longitudinal
study of 468 children, parents, and grandparents, Carbonneau, Vitaro, Bredgen and Tremblay
(2018) measured child behavioural problems with parent-ratings of hyperactivity/impulsivity and
inattention drawn from the Canadian National Longitudinal Study of Children and Youth (Statistics
Canada, 1995). Current parental problem gambling was related to current
inattention/hyperactivity in children, and grandparent problem gambling was related to parent
hyperactivity/impulsivity in their childhood. Another longitudinal study reported that children
whose parents had gambling problems were more likely to exhibit symptoms of conduct disorder
at the ages of 16 and 23 than children whose parents did not have gambling problems (Vitaro et
al., 2008). This study further found that ineffective parenting mediated the relationship between
parental problem gambling and child conduct problems. Using a 30-item Behaviour Problem
Index (BPI; Peterson & Zill, 1986), Momper and Jackson (2007) and found that maternal problem
gambling was predictive of behaviour problems only in the children of mothers who received less
social support from family members. There are conflicting results, however, with Dowling et al.
(2018), not finding elevated levels of externalising behaviours using the Child Behavioural
Checklist (CBCL; Achenbach & Edelbrock 1983) in the children of women with gambling
problems, compared to a normative sample.
Physical
health
Psychological
Intergenerational
transmission
Relationships
Financial
Behavioural
Figure 1: Areas of child wellbeing impacted by parental gambling identified in empirical literature.
Current study
Notwithstanding insights that have been obtained in the economic or psychological impacts of
familial gambling and problem gambling, relatively little is known about gambling-related harm
experienced by children attributed to parental problem gambling. Accordingly, the overarching
aim of the current project is to better understand the ways children are affected by parental
problem gambling. This aim was addressed in three stages, with more detailed research
questions detailed below:
1. What are the key areas of child wellbeing that are affected by parental problem gambling
according to previous literature? (see Literature review [Stage 1])
3. To what extent does parental gambling severity and other family factors (parenting, problem
gambling exposure) predict the degree and type of gambling harm experienced by children?
(Stage 2)
4. In what ways does exposure to gambling harm in childhood relate to outcomes later in life,
including general health and psychological wellbeing? (Stage 2)
Participants were from every Australian State and Territory, but mostly from Victoria (36.7 per
cent) then New South Wales (28.2), Queensland (17.0), Australian Capital Territory (6.9 per
cent), South Australia (4.1 per cent), Tasmania (2.8 per cent), Western Australia (2.4) and the
Northern Territory (2.0 per cent). Of the initial sample, 377 participants (74 per cent) completed
the whole survey while the remainder completed a portion of the survey. The sample breakdown
of those who completed the whole survey was similar to those in the whole sample (43.8 per cent
gamblers; 57.6 per cent child of a gambler; 37.1 per cent spouse of a gambler; 12.9 per cent with
no own parent or spouse gambling).
Power analysis for the linear/negative binomial regressions using the adult children of gamblers
sample (see Analytical Plan for Stage 2) indicated that at anticipated effect size 0.15 (medium),
0.8 statistical power with 8 predictors and p <.05 the minimum required sample size is 139. For
the logistic regressions, the calculations are less simple. Normally 10:1 rule is recommended
(Peduzzi et al., 1996), thus for the logistic regressions with up to eight predictors, minimum
required sample size for adequate power is 80.
73
100 (19.6%) (14.3%)
control
86 (16.9%) 32 (6.3%)
69
13.5 (%)
74 (14.5%) 50
26 (5.1%)
(9.8%)
GAMBLERS SPOUSES OF
(n = 255) GAMBLERS (n=177)
Figure 3 shows the survey flow and sample sizes for each main part of the survey. The largest
group were adult children of gamblers, followed by gamblers and spouses of gamblers. Each
group was asked about parents/own/spouses regular gambling, and whether this gambling was
ever at a problematic level through a gambling severity screening tool (NODS-CLiP for gamblers
and gambling adaptation of CAST-6 for children and spouses of gamblers). Exceptions to this
were 76 children of gamblers where parental gambling started after they had turned 18, and 89
spouses of gamblers where a child was not exposed to gambling. Each group that was screened
for gambling severity was then asked about specific types of gambling harm due to
parental/own/spouses gambling (Gambling Harm to Children). All participants answered
questions about current wellbeing and demographics at the end of the survey.
Recruitment
The Gambling in Families online survey (Qualtrics) was open from August 2020 until February
2021 for adults (18+) who lived in Australia. Recruitment via social media platforms such as
Twitter and Facebook, as well as through the authors’ professional networks and snowball
sampling. No remuneration was given for participation in the online survey.
A summary of survey questions for each participant group is shown in Table 1 in Appendix A, and
full details are presented in Appendix B.
1. Current wellbeing: the first part of the analysis employed descriptive statistics to
describe current wellbeing scores for the whole sample and across the three groups: (1)
gamblers, (2) adult children of gamblers, and (3) spouses of gamblers. The analysis also
examined the impact of problem gambling exposure to current wellbeing measures
across the three groups. Chi-square and t-test analyses were used to indicate any
significant differences between the groups and associations with problem gambling
household exposure (p< .05).
2. Harm to Children item analysis: the second part of the analysis only involved data from
gamblers and spouses of gamblers who were also parents, and children exposed to
parental gambling. Responses of the three groups were compared on gambling harm to
children items, parenting and child wellbeing variables. Chi-square and t-test analyses
were used to indicate any significant differences between the groups and associations
with problem gambling household exposure (p< .05).
3. Predictors of gambling Harm to Children and current wellbeing. the third part of the
analysis reported on data collected from the adult children of gamblers who were under
18 years of age at the time of their parent’s gambling.
RQ2: Are gambling harms experienced by children exposed to parental gambling (including problem
gambling) reported differently across three groups of respondents: (i) regular gamblers, (ii) adult
children of regular gamblers and (iii) spouses of regular gamblers?
RQ3: To what extent does parental gambling severity and other family factors (parenting, problem
gambling exposure) predict the degree and type of gambling harm experienced by children?
RQ4: In what ways does exposure to gambling harm in childhood relate to outcomes later in life,
including general health and psychological wellbeing?
The chapter begins by describing the sample characteristics used in the current study including
description of the study flow and breakdown into three respondent groups: (1) regular gamblers;
(2) children of regular gamblers; (3) spouses of regular gamblers. The first part of the analysis,
responding to Research Question 2, reports on a subset of the sample who reported household
exposure to a child under 18 years of age: (1) regular gamblers who are parents; (2) adult
children of regular gamblers; (3) spouses of regular gamblers who are parents. The section
reports on Gambling Harm to Children items, from the perspectives of parents (both gamblers
and spouses) and children and compares patterns of perceived harm across the groups. The
third part of the analysis, responding to Research Questions 3 and 4, reports on data from
children of regular gamblers only and examines the predictors of the Gambling Harm to Children
items and how different types of gambling harm experienced as a child are associated with their
current health and wellbeing.
Table 3 shows the breakdown of the sample into three groups who answered questions about
child exposure to parental gambling. For the ‘adult children of gamblers’ group, subgroupings
were created based on whether they had been exposed to parental problem gambling or not (i.e.
non-problem gambling). For the parent respondents (gamblers and spouses) subgroupings were
created on whether a child was exposed to parental non-problem and problem gambling. Table 3
shows the breakdown of the main groups of interest that reported on gambling harm experienced
by children: (1) gamblers with dependent children; (2) adult children of gamblers; and (3) spouses
of gamblers with dependent children.
Respondent Brief description of the respondent Child exposed to Child not Total
group group household PG exposed to n (%)
n (%) household PG
n (%)
Gamblers Participant gambled while living 109 (85.2) 19 (14.8) 128 (100.0)
with a dependent child **
As shown in Table 4, non-problem gamblers and spouses of non-problem gamblers did not
endorse any of the harm items. Adult children of problem gamblers were significantly more likely
to report each type of harm compared to children of non-problem gamblers where there were
sufficient cell sizes to test. The most commonly reported types of harm reported by children of
problem gambling parents were emotional distress and relationship problems. In contrast, most
commonly reported types of harm to children reported by gamblers and spouses was ‘not enough
money’ due to parental gambling. Spouses also reported high occurrences of emotional distress,
relationship problems, and verbal abuse towards a child as a result of parental gambling. While
the analysis did not statistically compare the harm items between gamblers, spouses and
Table 4. Gambling Harm to Children reported by three respondent groups according to household
problem gambling exposure status.
Respondent groups
Table 5. Child socioemotional wellbeing, and parenting, reported by gamblers and spouses.
Respondent groups
(1) Gambler (3) Spouse of gambler
Has GPs, Does not have Spouse has GPs, Spouse does not have
M (SD) GPs, M (SD) M (SD) GPs,
n = 58 n = 12 n = 41 M (SD)
n=3
Internalising difficulties 6.8 (3.1) 6.9 (4.4) 8.5 (3.6) -
Externalising 7.2 (2.7) 6.3 (4.5) 7.1 (2.4) -
difficulties
Total difficulties 14.0 (5.4) 13.2 (8.8) 15.6 (5.1) -
Consistent parenting 2.7 (0.5) 2.6 (0.6) 2.7 (0.7) -
Hostile parenting 3.5 (1.8) 1.7 (1.5) 3.5 (1.6) -
Note: there were no significant differences across the groups. GPs= gambling problems. Spouses where there were no gambling
problems are supressed due to small sample size.
Table 6 shows the bivariate associations between the Gambling Harm to Children items,
parenting and gambling exposure variables for the subsample of children of regular gamblers. It
shows that all Gambling Harm to Children items were highly correlated with one another with the
exception of the association between ‘emotional distress’ and ‘child welfare calls’. It also shows
that more severe parental gambling and less responsive parenting were associated with higher
likelihood of each type of harm, with the exception of ‘child welfare calls’. Paternal gambling (as
opposed to maternal gambling) was associated with a lower likelihood of being left unsupervised,
of distress and upset and of relationship problems. Having two parents who gambled (as opposed
to just one) was associated with higher rates of ‘being left unsupervised’.
Variables that were significantly associated (p<.05) with the Gambling Harm to Children items
were then entered into a series of regression models to predict each type of harm (see Table 7).
These models examined the relationship between each harm item and: 1) parental problem
gambling severity; 2) parental responsiveness; 3) gambling parent’s gender; and 4) whether the
participant had two gambling parents or just one. After adjusting for the covariates (participant
age, gender, country of birth, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander status), parental gambling
severity predicted higher rates of each type of harm to children, with the exception of ‘child
welfare call’: the higher the score on problem gambling severity, the more likely it was that the
participant had experienced each type of harm. Another consistent predictor was parental
responsiveness: participants with less responsive parents were more likely to report each type of
harm with the exception ‘child welfare call’. Compared to participants born overseas, those born
in Australia were less likely to report physical harm and a shortage of money as a result of their
parent’s gambling. Having two parents who gambled (as opposed to just one) significantly
predicted having been left unsupervised as a child. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander status
was not related to the individual harm items but it predicted a greater number of harm items being
reported.
Table 7. Multivariate logistic regressions predicting Gambling Harm to Children items: Coefficients and [95% CIs].
Predictor variables Count of Physical Verbal Left Not Witness Child Emotional Child-parent
harms abuse abuse unsuperv. enough violence welfare distress relationship
money
Parent gambling 0.24 0.41 0.48 0.32 0.63 0.43 0.32 1.06 0.66
severity [0.19, 0.29] [0.11, 0.72] [0.27, 0.69] [0.13, 0.51] [0.39, 0.86] [0.20, 0.66] [-0.18, 0.83] [0.72, 1.39] [0.42, 0.91]
Parental responsive- -0.29 -1.00 -0.80 -0.80 -0.56 -0.62 0.10 -0,58 -1.31
ness [-0.39, -0.19] [-1.65, -0.35] [-1.27, 0.34] [-1.25, 0.35] [-1.02, -0.10] [-1.08, -0.17] [-0.80, 1.00] [-1.18, 0.03] [-1.91, -0.71]
Participant age -0.00 -0.01 0.01 -0.02 0.02 0.02 -0.05 0.00 0.01
[-0.01, 0.01] [-0.05, 0.03] [-0.02, 0.04] [-0.05, 0.01] [-0.01, 0.05] [-0.01, 0.05] [-0.13, 0.04] [-0.04, 0.04] [-0.03, 0.04]
Male participant (ref -0.10 0.33 -0.45 -0.01 -0.52 -0.21 0.00 0.28 -0.18
female) [-0.35, 0.16] [-0.95, 1.61] [-1.54, 0.63] [-1.04, 1.02] [-1.62, 0.56] [-1.21, 0.83] [-0.01, 0.01] [-1.12, 1.69] [-1.39, 1.03]
2 gambling parents 0.07 0.50 -0.34 1.32 -0.08 -0.04 0.21 -0.14 0.09
(ref 1 parent) [-0.15, 0.28] [-0.66, 1.66] [-1.33, 0.64] [0.31, 2.33] [-1.10, 0.94] [-1.00, 0.93] [-2.16, 2.58] [-1.52, 1.24] [-1.05, 1.22]
Aboriginal & Torres 0.48 1.18 1.08 1.82 2.24 -1.06 -2.75 2.20 -0.50
Strait Islander (ref no) [0.01, 0.94] [-1.33,3.69] [-1.31, 3.47] [-1.12, 4.77] [-0.94, 5.42] [-1.03, 3.15] [-5.88, 0.38] [-2.22, 6.61] [-2.81, 1.80]
Born in Australia -0.25 -1.71 -0.15 -0.23 -1.61 0.68 0.00 -1.24 -1.51
(ref overseas) [-0.07, 0.58] [-3.35, -0.07] [-1.64, 1.33] -1.63, 1.17] [-3.15, 0.08,] [2.12, 0.77,] [-0.01, 0.01] [-3.18, 0.71,] [-3.22, 0.19]
Gambling father (ref 0.05 0.56 -0.30 -0.27 0.50 0.73 1.12 -0.34 1.52
mother) [-0.15, 0.25] [-0.54. 1.66] [-1.16, 0.56] [-1.12, 0.58] [-0.40, 1.41] [-0.17, 1.62] [-1.01,3.24] [-1.53, 0.85] [-0.19, 1.28]
Prob > chi2 0.0000 0.0003 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 0.2259 0.0000 0.0000
Pseudo R2 0.1973 0.2281 0.2996 0.2626 0.3268 0.2029 0.1912 0.5612 0.4347
Table 8: Current wellbeing of participants who endorsed exposure to parental regular gambling as children
(<18 years) by problem gambling exposure status; bolded text indicates where children of gambler groups
were significantly different to the control group.
Table 9: Bivariate correlations between harm to children items, parental gambling exposure and current
wellbeing outcomes reported by children exposed to parental gambling.
Due to parent’s Anxie Depre PTSD Health Alcohol Smoking Drugs IPV IPV Family Own PG
gambling, did ty ssion vict perp function. severity
you ever
experience
Gambling Harm items
Physical abuse .23* .17* .33* .13 .01 .02 -.04 .12 .17* -.17* -.00
Verbal abuse .28* .20* .39* -.09 -.07 .06 .02 .24* .19* -.27* -.10
Unsupervised .28* .07 .24* .05 .13 .12 .03 .22* .23* -.18* -.02
No money .16 .02 .20* -.04 .09 .03 -.19* .09 .06 -.06 -.11
Witness .22* .16* .26* -.08 -.01 .04 .00 .08 .15 -.27* -.01
violence
Child welfare .16* .16* .22* -.10 .17* .10 .05 .09 .18* -.09 -.02-
call
Distress, upset .10 .04 .24* -.04 .01 -.01 -.09 .21* .16* -.09 -.22*
Relationship .23* .07 .28* -.03 -.09 -.01 -.05 .28* .14 -.24* -.22*
problems
Family factors
Parent PG .14 .02 .24* .07 .03 -.06 -.12 .11 .06 -.12 -.26*
severity
Responsive -.20* -.20* -.27* .09 .11 -.06 -.04 -.29* -.17* .38* .08
parenting
Parent gendera -.19* -.11* -.11 .14 .09 .03 .07 -.16* -.20* -.13 -.06
*=p<.05; PG = Problem gambling. PTSD = Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. IPV vict= Intimate partner violence –
victimisation. IPV perp = intimate partner violence - perpetration. aa positive relationship means higher likelihood of being a
male parent.
Research question 2: Are gambling harms experienced by children exposed to parental gambling
(including problem gambling) reported differently across three groups of respondents: (i) regular
gamblers, (ii) adult children of regular gamblers and (iii) spouses of regular gamblers?
- Where gamblers and spouses were the respondents and gambling was not problematic, no
Gambling Harm to Children items were endorsed. Children of non-problematic gamblers did
endorse the harm items, but at a rate that was three-to-six times higher than when gambling was
problematic.
- In households exposed to problem gambling, the gamblers themselves reported the lowest rates
of harm to children, followed by spouses. Adult children of gamblers reported the highest incidents
of each type of harm.
- Parents (both people with gambling problems and spouses) most commonly endorsed financial
impacts (not enough money) of problem gambling on their children. Children however, most
commonly reported feeling distressed and the negative impacts on family relationships as a result
of their parent’s problem gambling.
Research Question 3: To what extent does parental gambling severity and other family factors
(parenting, problem gambling exposure) predict the degree and type of gambling harm experienced by
children?
- Parental gambling severity and responsive parenting significantly predicted each type of gambling
harm to children –item except for ‘child welfare calls’, controlling for demographic factors:
o More severe parental gambling increased, and more responsive parenting decreased the
likelihood of each type of gambling harm items with the exception of ‘child welfare call’
item.
o Being born in Australia (compared to born overseas) decreased the likelihood of two types
of harm due to parental gambling: physical abuse and lack of money.
o The presence of another gambling parent increased the likelihood of being left
unsupervised due to parental gambling.
Research question 4: In what ways does exposure to gambling harm in childhood relate to outcomes
later in life, including general health and psychological wellbeing?
- Compared to participants who were not exposed to parental regular gambling as a child:
o Children of problem gambling parents were more likely to suffer from current depression,
anxiety, PTSD and IPV victimisation, own problem gambling and lower family functioning
o Children of regular non-problem gambling parents were also more likely to report current
depression, anxiety, IPV victimisation and own problem gambling. They also reported
twice the rate of own problem gambling compared to children of problem gambling
parents.
- Bivariate associations show that current health and wellbeing of children of regular gamblers were
significantly related to exposure to Gambling Harm to Children items, overall, while parental
gambling severity was generally not, with few exceptions:
o Exposure to more severe parental gambling was associated with more current PTSD
symptoms and less severe gambling of the participant themselves.
o Adult children of regular gamblers were also less likely to have gambling problems if they
had experienced distress or relationship problems directly related to parental gambling as
a child.
- Multivariate models predicting current wellbeing outcomes of children of regular gamblers showed
that the following associations remained significant after adjusting for family factors and participant
demographics:
o Child welfare calls due to parental gambling significantly predicted current depression
symptoms
o Verbal and physical abuse due to parental gambling significantly predicted current PTSD
symptoms
Recruitment
Stage 2 participants who endorsed any of the Gambling Harm to Children items in relation to their
parent’s gambling were invited to the Stage 3 qualitative interviews. This was done through a single
question in the online survey ascertaining whether the participant was willing to be contacted for
further in-depth phone interviews about the impacts of parental gambling. Of the online survey
participants who reported parental gambling and agreed to be contacted, 148 (58.0 per cent) reported
any harm from their parent’s gambling and 72 provided their contact details to be contacted for the
interviews. We attempted to contact 38 of these participants, prioritising younger participants as they
had more recent experience of parental gambling. The study team was able to complete 20 interviews
within the study timeframe.
Interviews
The phone interviews ranged from 25 minutes to 128 minutes (average length 48 minutes) and
participants were offered a $50 shopping voucher as a small acknowledgment of their significant
contribution to the study.
Analysis
With the exception of one interview in which handwritten notes were taken, the interviews were
recorded (with the permission of the participants), transcribed and imported into NVivo v12 for
qualitative analysis. The data were analysed using a dualistic technique of deductive and inductive
thematic analysis (Saldana, 2016; Fereday & Muir-Cochrane, 2006; Roberts, Dowell, & Nie, 2019).
Deductive approaches are based on the assumption that there are some principles that can be applied
to the phenomenon in focus (e.g. impacts of parental gambling on children). We applied deductive
model to the set of information provided by the participants, searching for consistencies and anomalies
across the participants responses, with minimal interpretation of what the participants said.
(Sandelowski, 2010; Fereday & Muir-Cochrane, 2019). The interviews were guided by the ‘harm to
children’ items participants had endorsed in the online survey and allowed them to elaborate on their
experienced of growing up in a household where parent gambled (see interview prompts in Appendix).
The responses and the data were organised according to the areas identified in the online survey, but
Table 12: Description of qualitative interview sample and online survey sample
The subsample of interview participants differed in some ways from the larger group of 191
participants in the online survey who had been exposed to parental problem gambling as children.
Table 13 show a comparison of the Gambling Harm to Children items reported by participants in both
samples.
The next section is organised according to the types of harm the participants experienced as a result
of their parent’s problem gambling when they were children, as described in the above table. The
section specifically reports participants’ accounts of the different types of harms they endorsed in the
online survey and how these were elaborated on in the interviews.
The qualitative analyses revealed 10 major themes: 1) experiences of family conflict; 2) experience of
child abuse by a gambling parent; 3) parental absence; 4) financial impact; 5) psychological impact; 6)
family relationships; 7) intergenerational transmission of gambling; 8) experiences of school and
education; 9) child welfare and integrational trauma and; 10) what would have helped/what did help.
My Dad would come home late from the pub, if at all, and Mum would get really pissed off
for days, it was quite obvious even when I was really young. The fights got worse and more
physical when I was older, or maybe I just understood more. Female, teens, father gambled
I quickly worked out whether they had won or not, because 9 times out of 10 they'd come
back, they'd be intoxicated, arguing, sometimes physically, altercations outside the house
or inside the house. And then that one time when they did win, it would be a joyous
occasion. Male, 20s, both parents gambled
They were kind of as bad as each other. They'd have a few drinks and there'd be fights. My
brother and I would hide under the bed. I was probably about seven or eight, he's 13 or
14[…]. There was a lot of violence growing up […]. It was tough. Female, 40s, mother
gambled
In families where there was no verbal or physical fighting, the conflict between parents was perceived
as a silent one, but it was still felt strongly by the participants.
And Mum, would just stay well clear of him on Saturdays. I think they had a don't ask, don't
tell policy with everything related to money and the races with a lot of conflict surrounding it,
and a lot of resentment. I know Mum resents how things were managed financially, but she
just didn't really have anything to do with it because she was the home keeper and looking
after the kids. Female, 20s, father gambled
My dad could be quite selfish, he didn't appreciate all the effort that she'd [Mum] gone
through to make it all work. And so, when she was starting to feel bad or he wasn't
communicating with her and things like that, she would tell me about it, and that would
make me quite angry. She would walk around on eggshells because she didn't want to
upset him or didn't want to say the wrong thing or do the wrong thing. Female, 20s, father
gambled.
There was never a punishment or any violence or anything, but it was almost like it was to
be expected. She had never hit me or hurt me, but I always just felt that that could have
happened. And then she just would yell at me and that could go for hours at a time.
Female, 40s, mother gambled
And he knew that I had that money somewhere in the house. And he came back from
evidently being at the pub one day. And I remember him threatening to punch my head in if
I didn't give him the money for that, so then he could then go and put it into a poker
machine. Female, 30s, father gambled
I'd get a beating and that sort of stuff, but there was always a trigger point, whether I was
arguing or had broken something or whatever. Not that it was justified. The punishment
was never quite to the degree that the thing was when she was at her worst. Female, 40s,
mother gambled
He became quite abusive when I was growing up mainly towards myself when things got
out of control. I was the main victim because I was a second eldest so he was abusive
verbally, physically and sexually. Female, 30s, both parents gambled
Parental absence
Sixteen participants reported being left unsupervised by the gambling parent in their childhood.
Sometimes, parents were physically and emotionally absent, leaving children completely
unsupervised. In other cases, participants were left in the company of other children or unsafe adults,
resulting in serious harm (for the participants or other people in the household), antisocial behaviours,
or emotional distress.
Mum was on and off with work, but she never had more time for me even when she was
unemployed. I got sometimes dropped at one of the clubs and the kids would watch a
movie and my mum would go gamble and then come pick me up, and sometimes it was
really late and I had fallen asleep. Female, teens, mother gambled
She's always been kind of absent and didn't really care what I did, which my [non-gambling]
dad also hated. Like I could at eight years of age just go for a bike ride around the
neighbourhood, be gone for hours and she wouldn't really care, I guess she was doing
other things. Female, 20s, mother gambled
He was always focused on gambling or getting to the pub and he never really took us down
to the creek or never took us swimming. Never taught us how to tie a knot. All the things
that you would want your dad to teach you as a child. He never did that, he was always just
so focused on gambling and drinking. Female, 30s, father gambled
Participants described feeling parental absence even in their physical presence: And if he wasn't
working, you could hear him watching a race, even when he is supposed to be with his kids. You could
hear him get mad and yell, you could tell if he came second. One participant suspected that gambling
acted as means to escape from family responsibilities:
My parents were massive gamblers and often away every night. They'd leave us home with
our elder sister, I would have been about six when that realization come in. That would
have been my earliest memory of being home alone, or there'd be times where Mum and
Dad would drop us off at the local pool, which wasn't far from [the gambling venue]. We'd
be there for hours after the pool shut waiting for Mum and Dad to come and pick us up.
Female, 40s, both parents gambled
We lived near the pub, so they figured it's fine [to leave children home alone]. And then it
was, "Well, if you're 10 years old, you can be staying here and looking after all your
younger siblings when we go to the pub." The children ranged from about six months of
age up to nine. Female, 30s, both parents gambled
I remember being left alone for him to pop into the TAB. It would’ve been in late primary
school. Not for long, but I remember waiting on the footpath with my three younger siblings
because I don't think kids are allowed in. Waiting there with my school bag while he's going
in to place that bet for whatever race and then come back out. Female, 30s, father gambled
Being left unsupervised left children feeling scared, unsafe, and anxious, and sometimes it resulted in
serious harm to the participant or other children in the household: My sister was molested by a family
member because he was the person who used to babysit us [when parents were out gambling]. Some
participants engaged in antisocial behaviours in their early teens, which became possible due to a lack
of parental supervision:
I think I put myself in so many risky situations as a 13, 14, 15 year old. Drinking and we
were able to smoke. I was smoking marijuana when Mum and Dad weren’t home. There
were some really creepy people around that did try and lure me somewhere. I remember
hiding for hours. Then I look at the impact on my brothers who got quite heavily into petty
crime, which set off a trajectory of their life. They did a lot of break and enters, they would
stash stuff at home. Female, 40s, both parents gambled
My younger sister was sneaking out at the age of 13 or 14, and doing things at a much
younger age. She was certainly drinking and she was hanging out with boys that were
much older than her, that was probably a bit unsafe. Female, 40s, mother gambled
Financial impact
A majority (n=15) of the participants talked about not having enough money due their parent’s
gambling. Many participants had grown up in low-income households where any degree of gambling
losses significantly added to the financial strain. That financial strain, in turn, resulted in unstable
housing and even issues with physical health. As one participant reported:
I think my Dad left. Didn't have any money, we were always moving around, and I realized
that we were always moving around because we kept on getting kicked out of places, not
because we just liked moving. Female, 20s, mother gambled
We never went without food, but we would often do whatever it was, just toast, that sort of
stuff. Sometimes she [gambling mum] wouldn't have enough money for petrol in the car, so
she'd have to catch the bus into town. Female, 40s, mother gambled
It was pretty tight, but I didn't care. I remember going to the school fete around about
Christmas time and I bought a raffle ticket for a wheelbarrow full of groceries and Christmas
things. I remember winning it and Mum was just in tears. She was in absolute tears. And I
thought it was tears because she was happy that we won it, but it was tears because there
was nothing in the cupboard. Female, 30s, father gambled
I got older and I wasn't able to do certain things due to funding constraints. And I'm like,
"But there's money right there that's going into that poker machine." Female, 30s, both
parents gambled
Our school camp coming up and my parents said, "Oh, we really can't afford it. We don't
have a lot of money," but they would still have enough money on the weekends. My mum
would still have enough money to go with my grandma and my dad would still have enough
money to go to the pub on the way home and have a few beers. And in my head it was like
part of our budget is factored towards that and it's not negotiable. Female, 30s, father
gambled
Financial shock
Participants who had experienced more well-to-do lifestyles and reported how they had experienced
the shock of losing the family home or a parental business. They described how this had led to
subsequent uncertainty and anxiety about having their basic needs met in the future.
We were well off enough to all be going to good schools and have a nice house in [wealthy
suburb], and then everything just completely flipped upside down very quickly. I remember
my mum telling me through very teary eyes, and it was just such a shock, because we had
a really lovely life. So it was just a bit of a shock and a bit confusing. Female, 30s, father
gambled
I remember the For Sale sign, so the bankruptcy, selling the house meant they were
foreclosing. It was right outside my bedroom window, so I'd look out the window at night
I just came back from school camp and everything was packed up when we were moving.
My parents had lost their business and the house at the same time. So it's hard for me to
say if it was because of gambling. Maybe one day I'll be able to ask them if it was lost due
to gambling. While I still see them gambling, it's hard to ask. Female, 30s, both parents
gambled
Psychological impact
Eighteen participants reported distress directly related to parental gambling that involved feeling angry,
scared, or confused. Psychological impacts of gambling were heavily intertwined with financial impacts
as well as other conflict, abuse and severe neglect. In some cases, participants who had experienced
these issues as children felt that they were at least partially to blame.
I always thought I was the problem. This is normal behaviour, but because I was the only
one saying, "I don't think this is right," and always being told, "You're just causing trouble.
You don't know what you're talking about." I took that with my life. So no matter what
happened to me, my life later on, I somehow managed to turn it where it was my fault.
Female, 40s, both parents gambled
During the night, I remember feeling scared. I remember I'd be scared with Mum and Dad
at home during the night. But when they weren't home, I do remember feeling scared of the
dark outside. I was really feeling quite vulnerable. Female, 30s, both parents gambled
The psychological impact of the parent’s problem gambling commonly continued to early adulthood.
Half of the participants had experienced at least one episode of serious mental health problems,
mostly during adolescence and during the transition to adulthood. These mental health problems
included addictive behaviours (problem gambling, alcohol and drug abuse), stress-related disorders
(including PTSD and generalised anxiety), and mood-related disorders (such as depression).
One participant described how his mental health had deteriorated after moving out from the family
home where both parents had exhibited problematic gambling throughout his childhood, and the
subsequent development of serious gambling problems. This was followed by multiple suicide
attempts and a PTSD diagnosis. He described the intertwined relationship of the PTSD symptoms and
suicidality following gambling binges and heavy losses.
The first time [suicide attempt] was more of a cry for help. The second time was a genuine
attempt, and it's very f**** lucky that I didn't... I ran my car off the road at a pretty high
speed and straight off an embankment. It was really uncanny that I didn't die. If I was to
gamble now, it’d be the death sentence for me, to go back and gamble. So I just wouldn't
do it anymore. Male, 20s, both parents gambled
Another example of complex mental health problems was provided by a participant who was sexually
and physically abused by her gambling father. This experience resulted in a PTSD diagnosis,
depression and generalised anxiety in early adulthood. While most participants did not attribute their
current mental health problems directly to their parent’s gambling, they acknowledged that the
instability and unsafe environment stemming from gambling had contributed to their own psychological
difficulties.
I'm very highly strung. I feel like I have to take care of everything. Everything has to be
controlled and very maintained. I think that comes from the instability as a kid. I'm very,
very sentimental, and it's a bit of a second hand impact, but because of the instability from
not having money, and moving around, I don't like change that is out of my control. Female,
20s, mother gambled
When I was 18, I was seeing a psychologist and on antidepressants. I left this really intense
family situation to go to university, and just ... Everything was very messed up and it was
very, very tough because all this pressure from helping my mum and siblings and being in
this love/hate, intense situation, I think I've spent for the most part my 20s recovering from
it. And it was the gambling issue really what triggered this monumental wave of issues.
Female, 30s, father gambled
Family relationships
Sixteen participants elaborated on the impact of parental gambling on their relationship with the
gambling parent, their other parent and other family members.
The problems in our relationship have been more about Dad's emotional absence and
neutrality towards everything, as opposed to the gambling. And I think the gambling has
just ended up being one of many ways in which he didn't take responsibility. Female, 30s,
father gambled
When he's talking and you are listening, that’s fine. But when he listens, he doesn't really
listen. Or he listens, but doesn’t hear. I guess when this is aimed at you, you feel useless or
you are f**** useless, or what are you doing that for? Continuously. Also, if you don't do
something right then you're f**** useless. Female, 30s, father gambled
I didn't actually have a bad relationship particularly, but I guess she's always been absent.
She didn't really care what I did, like be gone for hours and she wouldn't really care, she
was doing other things. After I moved out our relationship got a lot better. I didn't speak to
her for a little bit, because we left in a s**** circumstance, but since not living with her, I can
talk to her. She wasn't a good mum, and I hated her having control over my life. Female,
20s, mother gambled
Co-occurring alcohol abuse, gambling and abusive behaviours also played a role in the relationship
between the participants and their gambling parent(s). While gambling was not thought to directly
impact the parent-child relationship, participants reported that their parent’s bad moods following
gambling losses were exacerbated by their drinking and the general instability.
The other thing associated with problem gambling was she was an alcoholic. So our
relationship was quite fraught when I was younger, because of those two things and she
Our relationship wasn't that great. I guess combination of the gambling and also the alcohol
that just seemed to come with it, whenever he came home from gambling - if he'd had a
bad day which was more often than not - he would have a very, very short temper.
Aggressive, saying nasty things, so you just learned to avoid him and go outside or go up
the paddock or whatever, anything just really to get out of the house. Female, 30s, father
gambled
While many described the child-parent relationship had been OK as a young child, they also reported
that it had become progressively strained over time with feelings of mistrust and disappointment
having emerged: “You can sort of separate yourself from your family a bit when you get older”. This
often stemmed from a realisation of how the gambling parent treated the other family members,
particularly the non-gambling parent.
When I was in probably 14 through to 17, we just didn't have a relationship at all. I just
didn't really have much time for him and didn't have much patience for the crap that he was
carrying on with, which it might be just a teenage thing. Female, 30s, father gambled
Going into my teenage years the relationship became more strained, when that [gambling]
got revealed I was very, very angry. I actually could not understand how someone could do
that to their family and to their partner. I would even tell my mum that, "I'm surprised you're
not divorcing him”. Female, 20s, father gambled
As a result of growing resentment towards their gambling parents in their adolescence and early
adulthood, four participants had completely cut off relationships with their families:
I said to Mum in my early twenties, when we were still living at home, "Listen, I think you
need to leave. This is no good for Dad. This is no good for any of us. You're not here. You
don't want to be here. It's evident that you don't want to be here. You need to leave." I think
that was kind of the straw that broke the camel's back in our relationship. Female, 40s,
mother gambled
One participant who had also struggled with their own gambling addiction described severing all ties
with his family of origin:
I thought I had a good relationship with my parents. Again, that was my normal. And I felt,
even though we lived week to week, we banded together and that was their cycle in our
family unit. But as I got older and I've done years of therapy I know its not normal and that's
the reason why I don't have a relationship with anyone in my family anymore, because
they're all marred by some gambling or addiction or mental health issue. Male, 20s, both
parents gambled
…the outcome could have been quite different if Mum and Dad had continued to gamble at the
rate that they were. So that could have potentially broken down any relationship when we
were older because you start to understand things. If they didn't realise that they needed to
change their ways with gambling. Female, 40s, both parents gambled
Similarly, some participants generally had a positive relationship with their non-gambling parent that
acted as a protective ‘buffer’ against the negative impacts of gambling in the family.
Mum stayed at home our whole lives. There were a few times where, because I'm one of
five, so she had to do everything. I know there are a few times where their relationship
struggled and especially on a Saturday, if they had a big win because he part-owned race
horses with a few other people. If they had a big win he'd come home really late, obviously
drunk and pass out. There was no support there for her. Female, 20s, father gambled
Because Mum worked really hard to make sure that we were able to do things that we
wanted to do like me playing football or [sister] still learning piano or something like that.
We just, I guess we were always living on the edge about if something went wrong, then we
wouldn't have anything else. Male, 20s, father gambled
Dad made several attempts throughout probably the year where it was at its worst, of
calling the clubs and saying, "Stop. Please stop her from entering," and they, of course,
were like, "Well, we can't prevent this. She's a customer, and she comes in.” So there was
quite a bit of desperation from my father. Female, 40s, mother gambled
I think there was a point Mum took all Dad's cards off him and he wasn't allowed to have
any ATM cards at any time. But after seeing how he used to speak to Mum all the time
about it, and Mum was working her bum off to make sure that they didn't lose the house, I
didn't have much time for him. And Mum didn't talk about it to anybody, out of shame I
guess. Female, 30s, father gambled
Mum and I have a very close relationship. I know behind the scenes with Mum there was a
lot of stress about finding money to make sure we didn't lose things. I became pretty much
the sounding board for Mum, I think. After she kind of got everything off her chest with me, I
then became a bit of a confidant for her. Female, 20s, father gambled
These accounts highlight the clear emotional and financial burden on the non-gambling parent. For
some participants, this burden resulted in maladaptive coping strategies employed by the non-
gambling parent, including increasing their use of alcohol. These behaviours further decreased the
level of parental support available to the children in the family.
My mum coped with the break-up and move by drinking, grew up with a lot of anger in the
house ... She just didn't have the time or tools to deal with us, and then maybe six years
ago now she went to a rehab facility and has not drunk at all since then, but that was an
Taking responsibility
One major theme was how gambling affected family relationships through the dereliction of financial or
family responsibilities. This generally resulted in one of two outcomes: (1) the non-gambling parent
compensating for the gambling parent; or (2) children becoming ‘parentified’ and taking on the role of
an adult. This pattern was particularly strong in families where both parents exhibited problematic
gambling.
He [gambling dad] was making okay money, but he just wouldn't share it. And he would
also use his own money that he made from work instead of helping out the family, he would
just use it as his play money, I suppose. Mum was very frustrated that he would be so
selfish about it. And that he wouldn't see the harm that he was doing to the rest of us. Mum
worked really hard to make up for his losses. Male, 20s, father gambled
Behind the scenes Mum had lot of stress about finding money to make sure we didn't lose
things. Once everything started to settle, she was still frantically working in the background
to make sure we had enough money for everything, and paying back loans she could. My
dad did not see that at all, and it got actually really quite infuriating when she would do all
these things basically to make up for his mistake. Female, 20s, father gambled
When the addiction came out and then when he got unwell in terms of his anxiety, all the
responsibilities got defaulted to my mum in terms of, "How do we now live? So, she had to
be the one to work out, "Where does the money come from? How do I pay off everything?
How do I do this?" Because he was out of work too because of being unwell. Female, 20s,
father gambled
Parentification of children
Many participants described the gambling parent not taking responsibility for looking after the home,
young children or finances. The burden of these tasks would then fall on other family members,
exacerbating already strained family relationships: “When I was five, I'd often feel like I'd have to
protect my youngest siblings from [fighting over gambling]. Often I'd distract them or would play
something or I'd be the one shielding them from that”. The consequences of this type of parentification
were described by the participants.
I felt unsupported because I was babysitting kids when I really should have been doing
things like homework. So just recently my mother went, "Oh, you could have been a
doctor." And maybe I could have achieved that. But if you're doing a huge number of
chores and looking after a lot of kids it’s not really achievable. I don’t know anyone who’s
become a doctor and not had supportive family. Female, 30s, both parents gambled
My older brother had it worse. He had to drop out of school so he could work to pay for my
siblings to get by. Anything he wasn’t giving us, he was keeping to buy a car. But I know
that my dad took those funds and said that he would pay them back – it was like tens of
thousands – but never did. Everything was worse for him (my older brother). He’s now
Some of the participants talked about having conflicting thoughts about supporting their parents
through their gambling addiction:
What I didn't want her to do was lose all her money, but I also didn't want her to give it all to
me. And then in one of her moments of normalcy she'd go, "I've got a problem, I'm addicted
to gambling." So we'd talk about ways to stop. And I kick myself now ... But I didn't want to
take control for her, I wanted her to take the responsibility. Female, 40, mother gambled
I'd be angry when he'd win and be like, "I don't want this, because it's from your gambling."
Then I’d actually remember, "You've got to take it, because if you don't take it, he's just
going to take that money back to gambling." Female, 30s, father gambled
Even as young adults, the responsibility continued, often motivated by concern for younger siblings.
When our lease ended my dad was out gambling and responsibility to find us a house fell
to me– I was at uni at the time and had many younger siblings. I was squeezing it in
between uni classes and work. We actually got stuck without a house and had to stay in a
temporary accommodation. I said ‘I’ll find us a house but on the agreement that you start
saving, we can’t live like this anymore”. We ended up finding somewhere but he never
started saving. Then he ended up losing his job so for the last year of our lease my siblings
and I were paying for it. Female, 20s, father gambled
My father and his father were both bookmakers and the races stuff has always been a big
part of our family life. And that was his predominant source of income. He's quite
successful, my father - up until a point. Female, 20s, father gambled, own gambling
problems in the past
A lot of my siblings gamble. My siblings think that is normal behaviour and a normal use of
money. They justify it the same way my parents did, which is, "Hey, it's just like having a
hobby." So you put aside money for a hobby, which is gambling. Female, 30s, both parents
gambled, never had own gambling problems
My grandma did the horse racing and I remember her and my mom taking me and my
siblings to the races to watch the race. And then my mum and my grandma on the
weekends would go to the local club and we'd have a meal there, they'd do the meat raffle,
then say my mum would stay with us and my grandma would go and play the poker
machine and then they'd swap. Female, 20s, both parents gambled, own gambling
problems in the past
Own gambling
While only two participants currently gambled, six participants reported lifetime gambling problems.
The normalisation of gambling in their childhood coupled with a lack of appropriate supports translated
to complex and severe gambling issues for these participants.
I have addictive personality that runs in the family. I guess it was the food and exercise in
the beginning. And as I got older and you were allowed to drink legally, I started drinking.
And then I got into being a chef and then I guess that started in with drugs as well.. And the
drinking led to gambling. Female, 30s, father gambled, own current gambling problems.
Participants generally held negative views about gambling, consistent with the low levels of
current gambling participation in the sample. For example, two participants who had never
gambled described their experience:
I was lucky that my mum, I guess, was able to convince us to just absolutely despise
gambling. I guess, because of Dad, because we could see that the problems that it could
cause… we just, I guess even subconsciously… we just didn't want that to happen to us.
Male, 20s, father gambled, never own gambling problems
I see gambling as a method that some people use when they've got underlying mental
health issues, and it's a way of control and maybe escape. I don't like gambling in any way
and, indeed, I don't do any gambling at all, I certainly always associate gambling with the
potential for family breakdown. Female, 40s, mother gambled, never own gambling
problems
Many participants perceived there were generally two options when one grows up in a problem
gambling family: namely, to give in to gambling or resist it and break free from the family tradition or
‘curse’.
So it's almost like they think, oh, the kids will stay the same from when they are little. And
then they get older and the kid has to make a choice, do I just keep going through and stay
at school, and then one day, hopefully, I can buy my own [house, car], or do I just go out
and steal and then hang out with my parents? That's your two choices as a child growing
up in a house with people like that. I chose just to ride it out. The rest of them chose not to.
Female, 40s, both parents gambled, own gambling problems in the past
I remember not having the right materials at school. The area I lived in was quite racist at
the time, so the public school we didn't have really good experiences with. I had to go to a
Catholic school. I do remember those school fees were massive for Mum and Dad and they
couldn't pay it. Pretty sure I missed out on an excursion because Mum and Dad didn't have
money. Female, 40s, both parents gambled
There would be excursions or something, unless the school was willing to subsidize then
we wouldn't get to go. There were trips to the state capital through school. And again, that
just didn't always end up happening. And there were things like want to buy some books.
Not happening. They generally didn’t see the point of prioritising money on anything
academic. I was the first in my family to finish year 12. Female, 30s, both parents gambled
We didn't go on very many excursions at all with school and Mum had to really think about
and plan financially with getting uniforms and new shoes or anything like that. Female, 35,
father gambled
Sometimes the impacts of parental problem gambling on schooling and later career pathways were
more severe due to “parentification” or the psychological impacts of gambling:
And looking back now, I realize why I didn't do as well in grade 12. I always used to put it
down to a being a bit lazy studying and I hadn't probably put my all into the course. Again,
certainly as I got older, I realized that not knowing what was going on, impacted on me. I
knew I was upset, but didn't realize how far reaching it was, Female, 40s, mother gambled
I had a lot of anxiety, and still do, I remember being not being able to concentrate at school,
because I didn't know what was happening underneath all of that, where I was going to be
living, how much more stuff was going to be taken, cars, house, what else was going to be
taken away? Female, 40s, mother gambled
One participant talked about child protection concerns for her young child, relating to her ex-partner’s
complex addictions and gambling-related problems. She described how welfare services had been
unable to intervene:
The court doesn't care if he's drinking and gambling and taking drugs. All they care about is
the effect on the child. The Family Court or child protection are not concerned unless you
can demonstrate a direct connection. I don’t want my child to be around that at all but until
you can prove that there's actually a link between that and the behaviour, you can't really
do anything about it. Female, 30s, father gambled
In one family, police and social services were called because of behavioural problems of a younger
sibling that were left unmanaged, particularly when the adults were out gambling. Some participants
also reported intergenerational transmission of family dysfunction associated with trauma.
She [gambling mum] came through group home settings [residential care]. She grew up in
just horrific circumstances although she did occasionally get a family. They were awful. And
then she would bounce back through the child protection system. All her siblings are either
dead or in jail so I have to say that she has done really well from that. Female, 30s, both
parents gambled
I've thought about it a lot and I've come to forgive her [gambling mum] for a lot as well. She
had it tough. She was raped when she was younger. She had a lot of self-esteem and body
issues. She was bulimic, she was an alcoholic. Female, 40s, mother gambled
Dad had six siblings, and one of them died from a drug overdose, he was addicted to
heroin for a long time. Of the two remaining brothers they are both heavy gamblers and
drinkers and the two sisters that remain as well. They are, one's a heavy drinker, one not
as much anymore. But they all have their own little addictions, sort of like obsessions. So
they've all had trauma in their life, but Dad is probably the most OK of all of them. Female,
30s, father gambled
Gambling places know who the repeat people are and they know the people who are
putting lots of repeated bets on, or whatever. There needs to be something there to trigger,
I think it would have been good if we had of gone to family counselling together or
something like that. I think she definitely needed some more help, just how much she
offloaded and debriefed with me, she probably should have been doing it with someone
else, and they would have been able to probably help her work through a lot more things.
Female, 20s, father gambled
When it broke up the family, and I think for my mum, to deal with the emotional turmoil, that
was where the support was most needed, because once my dad was out of the picture, he
had very little impact on my upbringing, whereas the repercussions of the gambling on my
mother who ended up raising us and how that damaged her trust, how that damaged her
sense that she could rely on people, how that damaged all of that, she was the one that
needed that support, because then she was the one that impacted my brothers and I, not
my dad. Female, 30s, father gambled
I'd like to say more education for kids so that they can understand that gambling is a
problem, but then I think even if I did recognize that it was wrong, I don't know if I would
have been able to do anything about it. Female, 30s, father gambled
Places and activities for us to go and do after school that were perhaps either free or
subsidized or whatever, just something so that we could go and do something else. Like if
he had to continue gambling, then just something where we could catch a bit of a break.
Female, 30s, father gambled
Education
Notwithstanding the general lack of parental supports for educational achievements, 17 of the 20
participants had completed a university degree and perceived that as the main circuit breaker in
stopping the intergenerational transmission of problem gambling. Schooling and education, receiving
I was very, very fortunate that I got awarded a scholarship to attend the local private school
and then boarding school later on, from when I was in like the preschool sort of situation.
Female, 30s, both parents gambled
Most participants emphasised the financial impact of parental gambling, such as living in poverty,
missing out on educational activities and materials, and nutritious food, but reported that parents would
always have money to gamble. The participants perceived these financial impacts as translating into
other problems including housing instability, a loss of the family home or livelihood, and family
members being left unsupported. Many participants reported feeling angry and confused about
parental gambling in their own childhood and most of them had experienced serious mental health
problems such as anxiety and PTSD in adulthood.
Family conflict, child abuse and neglect resulting from parental gambling affected relationships
between the gambling parent and the participant. Participants reported negative impacts on their
education and career pathways, with some having to drop out of school to look after siblings and earn
money. Many of them described their gambling parent(s) as physically and emotionally absent,
increasingly so as the participants got older. Although the protective relationship with non-gambling
parents (and in some cases with siblings) provided a buffer, children often took on parenting
responsibilities such as handling the family finances, doing household chores, and looking after
younger siblings.
Some of the important interventions or supports that the participants believed would have helped them
as children included having gambling venues take more responsibility for the wellbeing of their patrons
and the potential impact on families; professional support for the non-gambling parent; organised
activities for children outside the family home; and the presence of a safe adult with whom they could
confide.
RQ1: What are the key areas of child wellbeing that are affected by parental
problem gambling according to previous literature?
The study systematically built on the UK Gambling Commission’s (2019) framework for measuring
gambling-related harms among children and young people as a guide to organise existing literature
providing empirical evidence of the impacts of parental problem gambling on children. In Stage 1, the
framework was modified to better reflect the existing empirical evidence pertaining to key areas of
child wellbeing: (1) Financial problems; (2) Psychological/emotional problems; (3) Relationship
problems (within the family); (4) Family violence (a specific type of relationship problem); (5)
Behavioural problems; and (6) Physical health problems. The brief overview of the literature showed
that most prominent areas of child wellbeing directly related to parental problem gambling were
intergenerational transmission of problem gambling, psychological and emotional wellbeing, and
relational problems, particularly the child’s relationship with the problem gambling parent and
experiences of family violence. While child behavioural problems were not directly attributed to
parental problem gambling in the existing literature, the available evidence suggests that there are
disproportionately high rates of conduct and other behavioural issues in children of problem gambling
parents (Lorenz & Shuttlesworth, 1983; Carbonneau et al., 2018; Vitaro et al., 2008; Momper &
Jackson, 2007). There was also consistent evidence of the high rates of self-harm and suicidality in
children of people with gambling problems, suggesting that the ways child wellbeing and development
is affected by parental problem gambling is complex and nuanced (Jacobs et al., 1989; Lesieur and
Rothchild, 1989; Lloyd et al., 2016; Mann et al., 2017). Financial and physical health problems were
less commonly mentioned in the literature, notwithstanding financial harms are one of the most
commonly cited negative impact of problem gambling (Dowling, Suomi, Jackson, & Lavis, 2016). In
addition, we identified no studies that examined each of the areas of harm simultaneously specifically
in relation to children. This overview of existing literature provided a rationale for developing
methodology for an online survey.
RQ3: To what extent does parental gambling severity and other family factors
predict the degree and type of gambling harm experienced by children?
As expected, more severe parents’ problem gambling was associated with the higher number and
degree of gambling harm experienced by children, controlling for demographic factors and years of
exposure to parental gambling. This was the case for all eight harm items with the exception of child
welfare calls. Being born in Australia was related to lower likelihood of physical abuse and lack of
money–harm items, a finding that was consistent with previous research (Dowling, Rodda et al., 2014)
showing that participants with Australian cultural background reported significantly lower financial,
social and employment impacts compared to participants from non-Australian cultural backgrounds.
Future studies should examine the role of culture in how gambling harm manifests in families. The
presence of another gambling parent increased the likelihood of being left unsupervised due to
parental gambling, which is also consistent with the findings from the qualitative interviews on the
physical and emotional absence of problem gambling parents. The analysis also showed that more
responsive parenting was associated with less severity of each type of gambling harm experienced by
children, with the exception of child welfare calls and child distress due to parental gambling. Previous
evidence suggests that more positive parenting styles can potentially mitigate the degree of
intergenerational transmission of problem gambling (Dowling et al., 2017) but no previous studies have
examined the role of responsive parenting on other types of impacts of parental gambling on children.
It seems reasonable that more responsive parenting styles would protect children from family conflict
or parental absence related to problem gambling, but these findings need further examination using
larger samples. Years of parental gambling exposure to children, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
status and the gender of the gambling parent were not related to the degree or type of gambling harm
experienced by children.
Consistent with the social learning model of gambling, whereby child and adolescent gambling is
promoted by family members and friends, participants described gambling as ‘normalised’ and a
significant part of family leisure activities (Delfabbro & Thrupp 2003; Gupta & Derevensky 1998;
Hardoon & Derevensky 2001; Kalischuk et al. 2006; Ladouceur et al. 2001; Nower et al. 2004; Oei &
Raylu 2004; Vachon et al. 2004). They also described having been socialised to gambling at a young
age, a common pattern identified in other studies where children learn gambling through observation
of parental gambling, and increased access to gambling products at a young age (Delfabbro & Thrupp
2003; Nower et al. 2004). Gambling family members were eager to teach children the rules of
gambling that also makes gambling activities more accessible to them when they were old enough to
gamble without adults (Delfabbro & Thrupp 2003). As a result of the negative experiences from
parental problem gambling, many participants in the qualitative study, however, displayed extremely
negative attitudes towards gambling and had been able to break the intergenerational transmission of
problem gambling.
Although the pathways to gambling abstinence varied across individuals, most participants reported
they did not want the same kind of life for themselves or for their children as their parents had provided
for them. For some, this had involved having to experience and recover from their own severe
gambling problems or to remove themselves from the family environment that was the source of their
distress, although this was not always possible given the lack of social supports outside the family
environment. Others had sought professional help to deal with adverse impacts on family relationships
and participants’ own psychological wellbeing. Participants also related other potential opportunities for
interventions to break the cycle, including more supports for the non-gambling parent, respite activities
for children and ‘someone to talk to’, and venues taking more responsibility for regular clients who
display problematic patterns of gambling. The participants described problem or excessive gambling
In the last 10 years of conducting studies with children and young people across a wide range
of their health and illness-related issues, I have never seen such profound existential sadness
and hopelessness as was apparent in the children we interviewed whose parent (usually mum)
had changed from a ‘normal’ loving, attentive, trustworthy person to someone that the children
could barely recognise. Given gambling is a silent issue, it goes easily undetected in child
welfare investigations, but can be the main cause of safety concerns in the family.
(Darbyshire, 2005, p6)
Unfortunately, parental problem gambling remains a silent issue in the many disadvantaged families
(Rogers, 2013). The protective concerns associated with problem gambling (parental mental health,
child neglect, emotional/physical abuse, transience) share similarities with the risk factors associated
with parental substance abuse, which is currently a recognised child protection issue in statutory child
welfare systems (Smith & Wilson, 2016). There are no current screening tools or referral pathways for
parental problem gambling in the child protection system. Identification of parental gambling severity
could be piloted through the use of brief screening tools with children or other family members in child
welfare services such as the 6-item CAST-6 (Hodgins et al., 1993) used in the current study.
In addition to the high levels of abuse and neglect in the families, ‘parentification’ is a specific child
protection concern and it was commonly raised in responses to the current study. Earley and Cushway
(2002) describe parentification as children taking on a caring role in situations in which parents have
abdicated parenting. While parentification of a child has not been previously directly associated with
parental problem gambling, it is commonly recognised as a child protection issue specifically related to
parental mental health problems and addictive behaviours (Tedgård et al., 2019). Although Charles et
al. (2012) assert that parentification on a temporary basis is not harmful and may even act as a
protective ‘skill’, Barlow and MacMillan (2010) report that prolonged periods of parentification should
be considered as a form or emotional abuse given the high levels of psychosocial harm to the child
when they take on tasks that are developmentally inappropriate. In addition to its developmental and
emotional consequences, the current results showed that parentification also meant that some children
were not able to complete their schooling or to pursue their desired career pathways as they had to
help provide financially for their families and look after the home and younger siblings on a regular
basis.
Limitations
There are a number of methodological limitations in this research that should be taken into account
when interpreting the findings. First, the study used a self-selected convenience sample, thus the
A second limitation was a large amount of missing data, which is common in online surveys collecting
self-report data. Although we had over 500 participants starting the survey, only 74 per cent completed
the survey, which reduced the statistical power to detect significant effects. Cell sizes were also small
in some instances, reducing the generalisability of our findings.
Two of our key measures had not been previously validated for the gambling context. Given the
absence of validated measures to assess affected other’s gambling severity, the current study is the
first to adapt validated tools to measuring Gambling Harm to Children caused by parental gambling:
the Alcohol’s Harm to Children and the CAST-6. Both of these measures were initially developed for
family members of alcoholics to measure the severity of a family member’s alcohol abuse (CAST-6)
and its impacts on children (Alcohol’s Harm to Children scale). In addition to lack of psychometrics in
the gambling context, the tools measure the severity and impacts of problem gambling using ‘once
removed’ information about gambling behaviours, with a high likelihood of underreporting in the current
sample. The results from the Alcohol’s Harm to Children adaptation, indeed, suggests underreporting
of parental gambling severity, given that children of parents both with and without gambling problems
(identified using the CAST-6) reported significant harms.
There was a significant overlap between the adult children of gamblers, gamblers themselves, and
spouses of gamblers that may have confounded some of the results, particularly in relation to their
current wellbeing. In addition, our measure of lifetime regular gambling did not include timeframe or
frequency of that gambling, thus regular gambling was based on the subjective assessment of the
participant. However, this method is consistent to that used in other research (e.g., Delfabbro et al.,
2021) to cover a wide range gambling harm experiences by the participants in the study.
The measure of intimate partner violence (both victimisation and perpetration) is limited to threat or
actual physical violence. It therefore does not capture other forms of abuse such as verbal, emotional
and financial abuse, or coercive control. Further research should examine the relationship between
parental gambling and these abuse types.
Finally, the data on parental gambling and harms to children was mainly retrospective in both Stage 2
online survey and Stage 3 qualitative interviews and this may have affected the accuracy of some of
the self-reported outcomes. Participants may have been limited in their ability to isolate harms caused
by parental gambling from those with other causes (such as mental health difficulties), or may have
been unaware of their parents gambling if it occurred when they were very young. Collecting
retrospective self-report data, however, is a well-established methodological approach in research on
adverse childhood experiences (see for example Australian Child Maltreatment Study; Mathews et al.,
2021).
Despite these limitations, the current study provides novel information about the patterns of
association related to parental problem gambling, gambling harm experienced by children of people
with gambling problems and their current wellbeing using multiple perspectives across multiple
domains.
Parental concerns about child wellbeing are recognised as a major help-seeking trigger for people with
gambling problems and their spouses (Rodda et al., 2019; 2017). Thus, raising public awareness
about gambling harm on children could be used to engage more parents into treatment. The current
findings show that the non-gambling parents often take on a primary caregiver role, and more supports
should be provided for child socio-emotional and parenting needs. The results from the current study
are consistent with previous research showing that non-gambling spouses need a wide range of
supports to minimise the impact of parental gambling on children (Rodda et al., 2019). While family-
focused interventions focusing on coping skills of the family member in response to a gambling
problem show promising evidence (Hodgins et al. 2007; Orford et al. 2010; Rychtarik & McGillicuddy,
2006), there is a particular lack of interventions specifically targeting family members’ wellbeing,
including children (Kourgiantakis et al., 2021; Rodda et al., 2019).
The current results call for better service coordination to address the harm from parental problem
gambling on children. Examples of these exist in protocols requiring alcohol, drug and mental health
service inter-service collaboration that ensure that the interests of the children affected by alcohol,
drugs, or mental health issues are appropriately preserved (Dowling et al., 2010). Parental gambling
should be acknowledged as a risk factor in the context of child welfare, similar to alcohol and other
drugs (Afifi et al., 2010; Echeburua et al., 2011; Korman et al., 2008). Similar to these other services
that acknowledge the effects of parental addictions and mental health problems on dependent
children, problem gambling services require sophisticated protocols for referral of children to child-
specific services or the capacity to provide such services themselves. Notwithstanding the growing
evidence about the co-occurrence of family violence and gambling, including its detrimental impact on
children, there are currently no targeted interventions that would concurrently address both
behaviours. Child and family welfare services should have access to education and tools to identify
and address parental problem gambling in families, particularly in the presence of other wellbeing
factors such as family violence, mental health problems and other addictions. A high level of
integration of services encompassing assessment, referral, intervention, and post-intervention support
can be used to promote better outcomes for children living in problem gambling families.
Research Implications
The current study highlights a need for further work examining the harms experienced by children of
people with gambling problems and how these are related to family dynamics. Building on the
methodology used in the current study, future studies should use multiple informants and consistent
methodologies across studies and informants. Large-scale quantitative and in-depth qualitative data
on a wide range of gambling impacts and involving children and parents is needed to understand how
parental gambling affects child wellbeing and where interventions could be most effective.
Although a number of studies identified through the overview of the literature had collected data about
the wellbeing of both spouses and children of people with gambling problems, many of these did not
distinguish between the different groups that can be affected when problem gambling emerges within
families (e.g., Dowling et al., 2020; Li et al., 2017). Our results indicate that it is important to distinguish
between these different groups because there are likely to be meaningful differences in the processes
involved, the nature of the impacts and how they need to be understood. An important way in which
future studies might build upon our work is to examine the concordance between different respondent
groups. Most importantly, interviewing children of people with gambling problems while – or
immediately after – they are exposed to parental gambling may be useful to comprehensively gain
Conclusions
The current study presents one of the few empirical studies focusing on the broad ranging correlates
and impacts of parental problem gambling experienced by their children. The results of the study
highlight the intertwined nature of adverse childhood experiences and parental problem gambling,
particularly related to child neglect, abuse and various types of trauma and their long-lasting
consequences. Despite its limitations, the current study provides a comprehensive overview of the
main areas of wellbeing affected by parental problem gambling from the perspectives of the parents
and children exposed to problematic gambling. It shows the complex nature of family dynamics related
to problem gambling but also points to multiple opportunities for supports and intervention that may
improve the wellbeing of families and children exposed to gambling harm. The results of the project
can be used to inform future initiatives for multi-sectoral approaches that are currently needed to
adequately address the negative impacts of parental gambling in families with children. The voices of
children experiencing gambling harm should not remain silent anymore.
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Alcohol abuse AUDIT 3 binge drinking item (Bush, Kivlahan, McDonell, Fihn & Bradley,
1998)
Service use Use of 6 services in last 12 months, and since COVID-19 pandemic began.
Employment Employment status before and since COVID-19 pandemic began.
Demographic Age, state of residence, gender, Indigenous status, relationship status, country
characteristics of birth, highest educational qualification.
* electronic gaming machines (pokies), race betting, sports betting, casino table games, private betting or poker for money?
LSAC = Longitudinal Study of Australian Children. HILDA = Household Income and Labour Dynamics Study.
AUDIT = Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test.
1. Gamblers were identified via the question “Have you ever regularly participated in electronic gaming
machines (pokies), race betting, sports betting, casino table games, private betting or poker for
money?” (yes/no). Those who answered yes were then asked “When you think about the time you
gambled regularly, was there ever a child (0-17 years) living with you?” (yes/no).
2. Adult children of gamblers were identified via the question “Has your parent(s) ever regularly
participated in electronic gaming machines (pokies), race betting, sports betting, casino table games,
private betting or poker for money?” (yes/no). Participants who answered yes were then asked “How
old were you when they first started regularly gambling on electronic gaming machines (pokies), sports
betting, casino table games, private betting or poker for money?” (yes/no)
3. Spouses of gamblers were identified via the question “Have you ever lived with an intimate partner
who regularly participated in electronic gaming machines (pokies), race betting, sports betting, casino
table games, private betting or poker for money?” (yes/no). Those who answered yes were then asked
“Has there ever been a child (0–17yrs) living with you and your partner at the time your partner was
gambling regularly? (even if this child is now an adult)?” (yes/no). If participants had multiple gambling
partners, they responded in relation to their current or most recent gambling partner.
Gambling severity
For gamblers, the three-item NODS-CLiP (Volberg 2011) was employed to identify lifetime
pathological gambling. Participants indicated yes or no to the following: (1) Has there ever been a
period lasting two weeks or longer when you spent a lot of time thinking about your gambling
experiences or planning out future gambling ventures or bets?; (2) Have you ever tried to stop, cut
down, or control your gambling?; (3) Have you ever lied to family members, friends or others about
how much you gamble or how much money you lost on gambling? Total scores ranged from 0–3 with
endorsement of one or more items indicating lifetime pathological gambling. We used both total score
and the binary variable indicating lifetime problem gambling for the analyses.
For children and spouses of gamblers, gambling severity was assessed using the CAST-6 scale
(Hodgins et al. 1993) with adaptations to refer to gambling rather than alcohol use. Participants
indicated yes or no to the following items: (1) Have you ever thought that this parent/spouse had a
gambling problem? (2) Did you ever encourage this parent/spouse to quit gambling? (3) Did you ever
argue or fight with this parent about their gambling? (4) Have you ever heard this parent/spouse fight
with others about their gambling? (5) Did you ever feel like limiting this parent’s/spouse’s access to
money for gambling? (6) Did you ever wish that this parent/spouse would stop gambling? Item
endorsements were summed to create total scores ranged from 0–6 with scores over 3 indicating
problem gambling (Hodgins et al., 1993). We used both total score and the binary variable indicating
problem gambling for the analyses.
Parent-child relationship/parenting
The scales for parenting and parent-child relationships were chosen on the basis of being widely used
and validated in the Australian context. Because there were no validated measures available on this
construct adapted for both the child and parent perspectives, separate measures were used for
children (parenting responsiveness) and parents (parenting consistency and hostile parenting scales).
Adult children of gamblers provided information on their relationship with their gambling parent via
the Emotional Responsiveness Scale from the Parenting Style Inventory (Darling & Toyokawa, 1997).
Participants rated their agreement with five statements about their relationship with their parent as a
child (aged 0–17 years) such as ‘My parent hardly ever praised me for doing well”. On a five-point
scale ranging from 1 “strongly agree” to 5 strongly disagree”. Final scores were the mean of items,
with higher scores indicating more responsive parenting. The scale has adequate reliability
(Cronbach’s alpha = 0.74) and is predictive of school involvement, problems behaviours, substance
use and school achievement and (Darling & Toyokawa, 1997).
For gamblers and spouses who identified a child (aged 0–17 years) had been living with them at
the time of gambling, parent-child relationship was assessed via measures of parental consistency
and parental hostility that were used in the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC).
Where the child was no longer living with the participant, responses referred to the last period of
cohabitation. Where the child was now an adult, responses referred to the period when the child
was under 18 years of age. For spouses, parenting questions referred to the participant’s own
parenting at the time the spouse was gambling.
Parenting consistency (children aged 4+). Participants responded to five items such as
“When you give this child an instruction or request to do something, how often do you make
sure that he/she does it?” on a 5-point scale ranging from 1 “never/almost never” to 5 “all the
time”. Responses were summed to create final scores of 5 to 25 with higher scores
indicating more consistent parenting.
Hostile parenting (4+ years). Participants responded to six items such as “Of all the times
you talk to this child about his/her behaviour, how often is this disapproval?” on a five-item
scale ranging from 1 “never/almost never” to 10 “all the time”. Final scores were the mean of
item scores and thus ranged from 1 to 10 with higher scores indicating more hostility.
The scales have good reliability (H indexes range from 0.80 to 0.86 for consistency and 0.85
to 0.92 for hostility) (Zubrick, Lucas, Westrupp & Nicholson, 2014).
Family functioning
The quality of family relationships was assessed via the General Functioning subscale of the
McMaster Family Assessment Device (Epstein, Baldwin & Bishop, 1983) in relation to their current
family. Participants indicated their agreement with 12 statements such as “planning family activities is
difficult because we misunderstand each other” on a four-point scale ranging from 1 “strongly
disagree” to 4 “strongly agree”. Final scores were the mean of the 12 items and ranged from 1 to 4
with higher scores indicating better family functioning. The scale has good reliability (Cronbach’s alpha
of .86) and good validity against other family variables (Byles, Byrne, Boyle & Offord, 1988).
Anxiety symptoms
The severity of anxiety symptoms was measured using the two-item Generalized Anxiety Disorder
scale (GAD-2 Kroenke, Spitzer, Williams, Monahan, & Löwe, 2007). These items inquire how often the
participant has been bothered by “feeling nervous, anxious or on edge” and “not being able to stop or
control worrying” in the past two weeks. A 4-point Likert scale, ranging from 0 “not at all” to 3 “nearly
every day” was used, with responses summed to create the final score. Using a cut-off score of 3
(scores of 3 or more indicate anxiety symptoms), the GAD-2 has good diagnostic performance, with a
sensitivity of 86 per cent and specificity of 83 per cent for generalised anxiety disorder (Kroenke et al.,
2007). We used both count score as well as the binary variable indicating anxiety symptoms for the
analyses.
Depression symptoms
The severity of depression symptoms was measured using the two-item Patient Health Questionnaire
(PHQ-2; Kroenke, Spitzer, & Williams, 2003). These items inquire how often the participant has been
bothered by “little interest or pleasure in doing things” and “feeling down, depressed or hopeless” in
the past two weeks. A 4-point Likert scale, ranging from ‘0 “not at all’ to 3 “nearly every day’ was used,
with responses summed to create the final score. Using a cut-off score of 3 (scores of 3 or more
indicate depression symptoms), the PHQ-2 has a similar diagnostic performance as longer depression
scales, with a sensitivity of 83 per cent and specificity of 92 per cent for major depression (Kroenke,
Spitzer & Williams, 2003). We used both count score as well as the binary variable indicating
depression symptoms for the analyses.
Alcohol abuse
Current hazardous alcohol use was measured using an item from the Alcohol use Disorders
Identification Test (AUDIT-C) (Bush, Kivlahan, McDonell, Fihn & Bradley, 1998): How often do you
have six or more drinks on one occasion. Response options ranged from 0 “not at all” to 4 “daily or
almost daily”, and we dichotomised this measure to indicate whether or not participants reported any
binge drinking. This single item measure has a 90 per cent sensitivity and for past year alcohol abuse
or dependence for men, and 77 per cent sensitivity for women (Bush et al., 1998).
Drug use
Current drug use was assessed using the Single-Question Screening Test for Drug Use: “How many
times in the past year have you used an illegal drug or used a prescription medication for non-medical
General health
Participant health was assessed using the first item from the SF-36 (Ware & Sherbourne, 1992) “In
general, would you say your child’s health is…” with the response options ranging from 1 “excellent” to
5 “poor”.
Financial situation. Participants indicated whether, since the start of the COVID19 pandemic, any of
the following applied: 1) they had received Job Seeker payment; 2) received Job Keeper payment; 3)
lost their job; 4) applied for early access to superannuation; 5) asked for a pause on rent or mortgage
payments. They also indicated changes to their household income since the start of the pandemic, on
a five-point scale ranging from 1 “reduced a lot” to 5 “gone up a lot”.
Addictive behaviours. Participants indicated changes to their weekly habits regarding consuming
alcohol, using tobacco products and spending money on gambling activities since the start of the
COVID-19 pandemic on a five-point scale ranging from 1 “increased a lot” to 5 “decreased a lot”.
Relationship. Participants rated their relationship quality in the past month compared to before the
COVID-19 pandemic by indicating their agreement with four statements: 1) we are having more
meaningful conversations; 2) we are arguing more; 3) we feel closer; and 4) we are supporting each
other well. Responses were on a five-point scale ranging from 1 “strongly agree” to 5 “strongly
disagree”.
Service use
Participants indicated their use of the following services in the last 12 months, and since the COVID19
pandemic began: (1) mental health services; (2) gambling support services; (3) family relationship
services; (4) GP or primary care services. For each service, the response options were 0 “no” 1 “yes, I
have accessed”, and 2 “I have needed but not accessed”.
Employment
Participants indicated their main employment status before the COVID19 pandemic: 1 ”self-employed”;
2 “employed for wages, salary or payment in kind (full-time, part-time, casual)”; 3 “unemployed, on
JobSeeker”; 4 “solely engaged in home duties”; 5 “a student”; 6 “retired or on a pension”; 7
“volunteer/charity work”; 8 “unable to work”; 9 “unemployed, not receiving government benefits”; 10
“other”.
Other demographics
Participants indicated their age, state of residence, gender, Indigenous status, relationship status,
country of birth, and highest educational qualification.
Table A1: Current wellbeing of participants who endorsed own gambling, by gambling problems and parent
McMaster family 3.0 (0.7) 3.2 (0.7) 2.7 (0.7) 3.0 (0.7) 3.2 (0.5)
functioning, M (SD)
Past 12 months service
use
Mental health 32.1 23.1 28.8 22.8 22.8
status. Bolded cells indicate significant difference to the control group (p<.05).
NB: sample sizes differ from those in the Figure 1 due to missing data.
* p<.05 for comparison of problem gamblers, non-problem gamblers and control
GPs = gambling problems. PTSD = post traumatic stress disorder. GP = general practitioner. IPV = Intimate partner violence
No child exposed
Child exposed to spouses gambling to gamblinga Control
Participant’s Participant’s
spouse has GPs spouse does
n=56 not have GPs n=64 n=58
n=15
Anxiety, % 30.4 26.7 26.5 17.2
McMaster family 3.2 (0.7) 2.8 (0.6) 2.8 (0.7) 3.0 (0.5)
functioning, M (SD)
Past 12 months service use, %
Normally I’d like to start from just a bit of background information about your experiences of gambling.
You mentioned that one (or two?) of your parents gambled when you were a child. Tell me a little
about this parent (or is it both of your parents) who had a gambling problem?
Do you remember when you first learnt about it? What was that like?
What was your relationship with this parent like? And what is it like now?
Back to when you were a child… I just have some follow up questions about the questions we had in
the online survey TAKE OUT AS NEEDED.
• You mentioned that there were some fights/disagreements about your parent’s gambling
between you and them but also with other people? Do you want to tell me a little bit about
that?
• You mentioned there were some verbal/physical -abuse related to your parent’s gambling in
the house OR financial problems/distress/relationship impacts caused by the gambling. Would
you mind telling me more about that?
• You also mentioned being left unsupervised, can you tell me a little bit more about this? How
old were you when that happened?
• You mentioned child welfare services (or child protection) were called because of your
parent’s gambling, what happened then?
ALL: In your own words, what kind of impact do you think your parents gambling had on
• Financially?
Did you parent ever seek help? What kind of things do you think would’ve helped them to stop?
Have you ever sought professional support because of their gambling? What do you think would’ve
helped your own wellbeing as a child in a family where gambling was present?
What do you think about gambling in general, would you like to sum in one sentence
Anything else you would like to say before I turn off the recording?
Footy, friends and fun On stigma and how we can It’s never too late to give
tackle it up gambling
responsiblegambling
ResponsibleGambling
responsiblegambling.vic.gov.au