1 in 3 in Wales want to keep gambling hidden from work colleagues

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A new report into gambling from Reed in Partnership, which provides employment support services, today reveals the scale of the challenge faced by those who are in work or looking to get back into work. 

Online research conducted by the polling company YouGov shows that more than one in four working adults who gamble (28%) across Great Britain would prefer to keep the extent of their gambling hidden from their colleagues. The problem is particularly acute in the finance, accountancy and legal sectors, where more than a third (34%) worry about their work colleagues finding out about their gambling. 

Over a third of working adults in Wales (35%) who gamble would like to hide their gambling from work colleagues, higher than those in other regions such as the West Midlands (12%).

The report calls for businesses to take more action to support staff who may struggle with problem gambling and for employment support programmes to do more to identify the early signs of gambling addiction. Those with management responsibility are more likely to have gambled in the last year than those without management responsibility (45% vs 39%). Almost three quarters of people surveyed (72%) think that businesses should be concerned about the negative impact of gambling on their employees.  

The problem is having an impact on the UK economy, with 3% of adults knowing someone who has lost their jobs as a result of problem gambling, and many who are out of work being unable to get a job because of their compulsive behaviour or because they cannot afford the cost of travelling to an interview or buying work clothes. 

Regional Figures
·        In Wales, nearly half the population (49%) have gambled in the last 12 months, the second highest region in Great Britain and over a third (35%) would like to hide their gambling from work colleagues, the third highest region in Great Britain and nearly three times as many as those in the West Midlands (12%).
·        In London, 43% of people have gambled in the last 12 months, and 13% know someone for whom gambling has affected their work. 
·        Scotland has the most frequent gamblers, where more than a quarter of adults (28%) gamble at least once a week, over five times the numbers of adults in the South West of England (5%). Over a third (37%) of people in Scotland would like to hide their gambling from colleagues, compared to just 12% in the West Midlands and the highest region in Great Britain. 
·        In the North West, 43% of people have gambled in the last 12 months, and nearly one third (32%) would like to hide their gambling from their colleagues
·        In the North East, more than half (57%) of the population have gambled in the last 12 months, the highest region in Great Britain and compared to just a third (34%) in the South West. Over a quarter (26%) in the North East have gambled in the last week, the highest region in England. 
·        16% of people in Yorkshire & Humber know someone for whom gambling has affected their work, the highest region in Great Britain and more than three times in the West Midlands (5%).

The unemployed are twice as likely to use controversial Fixed Odds Betting Terminals, one of the major growth areas for high street betting shops, as those who are in work (8% vs 4%). With an estimated 35,000 machines across the UK, bets of up to £100 can be placed every 20 seconds, meaning a problem gambler could lose up to £1,500 in just five minutes. 

Martin Fallon, Managing Director of Reed in Partnership said: 
“It’s important that we provide adequate support and guidance for those who are at risk of losing their jobs because of gambling, and those whose addiction is stopping them from getting back into the workplace.  

“At the same time Fixed Odds Betting Terminals, which are particularly attractive to the unemployed, have such high limits that you could lose one month’s worth of Job Seeker’s Allowance in less than one minute.” 

Reed in Partnership also conducted interviews with their employment advisers who provide one to one and small group advice to those who are out of work. They reported that many young men including those with learning difficulties – talking openly about losing while gambling. 

One of Reed in Partnership’s employment advisers, who works with the long term unemployed, said: 
“Jobseekers already struggle when on JSA to make ends meet and by gambling they are entering a vicious circle which can be hard to break and cause debt, black listing or even crime.”

Reed in Partnership, which provides advice training and guidance to the unemployed, is looking at how more can be done to identify those at risk of developing a gambling problem through a diagnostic tool known as the Problem Gambling Severity Index (PGSI) and then providing advice and signposting to appropriate services. 

The report also calls on businesses to have strict workplace gambling policies, with risks to finances and addressing the detrimental impact on employees’ wellbeing. This could include better information in the work place so that employees can recognise if they or one of their colleagues is at the early stages of becoming a problem gambler. 

Case Studies
Online Case studies of people who have volunteered to describe their experience of gambling problems which have affected their work: rethinkgambling.org/your-gambling-addiction-story 

 

  Regional Figures:

% of population who has gambled in the last 12 months
 
% of population who know someone for whom gambling has affected their work
 
% of population who has gambled in last week
 
% of working adults who gamble who would like to hide their gambling from work colleagues
Region
 
Region
 
Region
 
Region
North East
57%
  Yorks & Humber
16%
  Scotland
28%
  Scotland
37%
Wales
49%
  North East
14%
  North East
26%
  North East
35%
Scotland
45%
  London
13%
  Wales
20%
  Wales
35%
North West
43%
  Wales
12%
  West Midlands
20%
  London
34%
East of England
43%
  Scotland
10%
  North West
16%
  North West
32%
London
43%
  North West
9%
  London
16%
  Yorks & Humber
27%
Yorks & Humber
41%
  East Midlands
8%
  Yorks & Humber
15%
  South West
26%
West Mids
37%
  South East
8%
  South East
13%
  East of England
23%
East Mids
34%
  East of England
7%
  East England
12%
  South East
22%
South East
34%
  South West
7%
  East Midlands
7%
  East Mids
17%
South West
34%
  West Midlands
5%
  South West
5%
  West Mids
12%
National Average
41%
  National Average
10%
  National Average
16%
  National Average
28%

 


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