Researchers say study funded by the Australian Research Council demonstrates the need for strict gambling advertising regulations.
Mon 12 Feb 2024 01.00 AEDT
Last modified on Mon 12 Feb 2024 01.02 AEDTThe study, funded by the Australian Research Council, heard from children who believed the use of stars like former basketball player Shaquille O’Neal in ads were making their peers more likely to consider gambling.
The researchers, from Deakin, Wollongong and Curtin universities, said the comments from the children surveyed demonstrate the need for strict advertising restrictions to “prevent the next generation from gambling harm”.
The federal government has been considering the recommendations of a parliamentary inquiry into online gambling, led by the late Labor MP Peta Murphy, which called for a comprehensive ban on ads and criticised celebrity endorsements.
Many of the 64 children from New South Wales and Victoria who were interviewed for the study, which was published in the journal Health Promotion International, said influencers on social media had young and impressionable audiences.
“Well, if my idol, my favourite YouTuber, Instagrammer, TikToker is gambling maybe I should give it a try,” the 12-year-old boy said.
A 13-year-old girl from New South Wales said influencers were making her peers more inclined to try gambling.
“As soon as they see a famous YouTuber or TikToker or Instagram [identity] … they think that suddenly it’s cool,” the girl said.
A 15-year-old boy said some ads gave the impression that gambling could lead to an improved lifestyle or appearance.
“I think you kind of get shown a bit of their lifestyle and think that if you can win like they are then you can like have that lifestyle that they’re living in the ads,” the boy said.
A 16-year-old girl said the gambling ads were deceptive and misleading.
“They’re acting like … they’re just gambling, but they’re getting paid. It’s all set up for them. It’s not at all like what real gambling is like, so it’s kind of like tricking you into wanting to do it,” the Victorian girl said.
Another 13-year-old girl criticised celebrities for partnering with gambling companies and described the practice as disheartening.
“They’re just thinking about the money that they’re going to earn through doing the ad,” the girl from New South Wales said. “They’re not thinking about the young people that are watching it. So, I don’t really think that they should be participating in these ads.”
Prof Samantha Thomas, a Deakin university academic who was one of the study authors, said the federal government should take the concerns of children quoted in the report seriously.
“It was disheartening to hear young people say they were sceptical about government action because of the gambling industry’s political influence,” Thomas said.
Thomas’ colleague at Deakin, Hannah Pitt, said the study revealed how effective celebrity endorsements were among a younger audience.
“They were concerned that young people would look up to these celebrities and make them believe that gambling was a normal thing to do,” Pitt said.
“They believed this content often only depicted the positives about gambling and weren’t showing the true harms that people could experience.”
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