The Gambling Commission has today launched a new gambling survey, which is set to become one of the largest in the world and establish a new baseline for understanding gambling behaviour in Britain.
The survey encompasses various forms of gambling, including casino sites, covers participation rates, types of activities, experiences, reasons for gambling, and impacts on individuals and their close ones.
The first annual report of the Gambling Survey for Great Britain, produced by National Centre for Social Research and the University of Glasgow, features responses from 9,804 people but will increase to around 20,000 by next year.
The publication provides greater insight into attitudes and gambling behaviours, presenting a fuller picture, illuminating participation rates, the type of gambling activities participated in, experiences and reasons for gambling, and the consequences that gambling can have on individuals and others close to them.
Tim Miller, Executive Director of Research and Policy, said: “One of our aims as regulators is to ensure we gather the best possible evidence on gambling, and today’s publication is the next significant step forward in our journey to create a robust source of evidence for gambling in Great Britain.
“Data in this report represents the first year of a new baseline against which future changes can be compared, and as such, it will prove invaluable in deepening further our understanding of gambling across the country.”
Professor Patrick Sturgis, Professor of Quantitative Social Science at the London School of Economics, added: "The new design of the Gambling Survey for Great Britain will significantly enhance the evidence base on patterns and trends in gambling behaviour.
“With an annual sample size of 20,000 individual interviews across the nations and regions of Great Britain, the survey will provide researchers and policy makers with fine-grained and timely data across a broad range of key indicators."
"Using a push-to-web mixed mode design and random probability sampling from the Postcode Address File, the survey implements state-of-the-art methodology to a very high standard." added Sturgis.
As part of a drive to ensure the new statistics are used correctly, the Commission has published guidance on how this data can be interpreted. For example, estimates presented in this report are not directly comparable with results from prior surveys due to the differing methodology, including a larger sample size.
The Commission will always robustly tackle any misuse of official statistics and our guidance sets out how we do this.
Most of my career was spent in teaching including at one of the UK’s top private schools. I left London in 2000 and set up home in Wales raising four beautiful children. I enrolled at University where I studied Photography and film and gained a Degree and subsequently a Masters Degree. In 2014 I helped launch a new local newspaper and managed to get front and back page as well as 6 filler pages on a weekly basis. I saw that journalism was changing and was a pioneer of hyperlocal news in Wales. In 2017 I started one of the first 24/7 free independent news sites for Wales. Having taken that to a successful business model I was keen for a new challenge. Joining the company is exciting for me especially as it is a new role in Europe. I am keen to establish myself and help others to do the same.
Read Full Bio