Gambling Behavior Among Hong Kong College and University Students

This study examined gambling behavior and correlates of pathological gambling among college and university students in Hong Kong. A survey questionnaire was administered to 510 Chinese students (302 men, 208 women) recruited from twelve tertiary institutions. The standardized questionnaire included questions on socio-demographic background, preferred lifetime and past-year gambling forms, attitudes towards gambling, perceived life satisfaction, social influence, intention to seek help, and a gambling screen to assess problematic gambling. The response rate is 86%. Results indicate the prevalence rate of lifetime and past-year gambling are 79.6% and 41.8% respectively with male domination. Many (60%) started gambling before 18  years. The estimate of lifetime vulnerability to pathological gambling is 14.7%. Pathological gambling is associated with the male gender, Internet gambling, monthly gambling expenditure, gambling attitude, betting on a great variety of games, and life dissatisfaction. Survey results have implicat ions for campus awareness programs and future research.
Source: International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction - Category: Addiction Source Type: research