Every year almost 500 lives are lost in the UK to gambling-related suicide. Behind these stark figures lies a wider pattern of harm, including anxiety and depression, broken relationships and physical health problems among young people growing up in households affected by gambling.
Despite this, gambling is still not properly treated as a public health issue in the same way as alcohol or smoking. That failure has consequences, not least for children.
Last year, I organised a mental health conference in my constituency. One of the most sobering sessions was delivered by Gambling with Lives, a charity formed by families bereaved through gambling-related suicide. They shared stories showing how gambling is not just an adult problem. It rips through families, schools and communities, leaving lasting damage for young people.
Read more:
- I took out loans and maxed out credit cards to fund my gambling addiction. I ended up homeless
- We need urgent action to protect next generation from ‘inescapable’ gambling
- Gambling should carry a public health warning like cigarettes to prevent suicides
Children can be hit twice by gambling. Indirectly, when a parent or carer’s addiction brings stress, conflict or neglect into the home. Then directly, when children are pulled into gambling themselves.
Today’s online slot-style games and betting sites make this easier than ever. This was brought home to me when I meet a young man who began betting online at just seven years old, an addiction that went on to dominate his teenage years.