Abstract

A focus group of Reno area Gamblers Anonymous members identified four psychological traits contributing to risk for problem gambling, including: Escape, Esteem, Excess and Excitement. A panel of four experts authored 240 Likert-type items to measure these traits. By design, none of the items explicitly referred to gambling activities. Study 1 narrowed the field of useful items by employing a quasi-experimental design which compared the answers of Reno area Gamblers Anonymous members (N = 39) to a control sample (N = 34). Study 2 submitted successful items, plus new items authored with the knowledge gained from Study 1, to validation in a random sample telephone survey across Queensland, Australia (N=2577). The final 40 item Four Es scale (4Es) was reliable (alpha=.90); predicted gambling problems as measured by the Canadian Problem Gambling Index of Severity (PGSI, Ferris & Wynne (2001). The Canadian Problem Gambling Index: Final Report: Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse); and distinguished problem gamblers from persons with alcohol abuse problems. The new scale can provide a basis for further study in harm minimization, treatment, and theory development.

Highlights

  • A focus group of Reno area Gamblers Anonymous members identified 4 psychological traits contributing to risk for problem gambling, including: Escape, Esteem, Excess and Excitement

  • Study 1 demonstrated the utility of Escape, Esteem, Excess and Excitement in identifying Gamblers Anonymous members from a control population

  • The relative weakness of the Esteem construct in identifying Gamblers Anonymous members pointed to a need for a reassessment of this construct

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Summary

Discussion

Study 1 demonstrated the utility of Escape, Esteem, Excess and Excitement in identifying Gamblers Anonymous members from a control population. The mean scores for Escape and Excess were reliably higher for persons with exclusive gambling problems as opposed to exclusive alcohol abuse problems. The scale appears useful in predicting alcohol abuse as well as problem gambling, relatively higher scores on the Escape and Excess traits uniquely distinguish persons with exclusive gambling related problems from others with exclusive alcohol abuse problems. Study 2 found that persons with an average score (over 40 items) of greater than 2.86 (approximately the top 5%), had 9 times the risk of being classified as a problem gambler compared to the lower 95th percentile. Another possibility is that the 4Es are influenced by cohort effects

Limitations
27 References
Findings
32. I often cannot think of things to keep my mind
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