A tale of missed opportunities: pursuit of a public health approach to gambling in New Zealand

Addiction
Peter J Adams, Fiona Rossen

Abstract

This paper provides a critical overview a decade after the New Zealand Government announced its intention to formally incorporate a public health approach into its comprehensive revision of gambling legislation. The initial enthusiasm and the subsequent disillusionment with this approach are tracked. Four reasons for its lack of success are examined. The New Zealand experiment with a public health approach to gambling is seen to have floundered in a network of vested interests. The pathways for influence included inappropriate industry input as well as community and government sector reliance on gambling profits. The new legislation neglected to set up systems for strong independent accountability, and this weakened the potential of public health initiatives. As with tobacco control, the policy integrity of a public health approach to gambling requires close attention to ways of reducing vested interests in both government and community sectors and to establishing strong points of independent accountability.

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Citations

Dec 17, 2015·Addiction·Charles Livingstone, Peter J Adams
Nov 6, 2015·Addiction·Ingeborg Rossow, Marianne Bang Hansen
Aug 16, 2016·Addiction·David C Hodgins, Nancy M Petry
Dec 7, 2019·Harm Reduction Journal·Ross Gordon, Gerda Reith
Feb 10, 2019·Harm Reduction Journal·David G BaxterCameron T J Wheaton
Jan 13, 2021·Zeitschrift für Gesundheitswissenschaften = Journal of public health·Alex PriceRosa Billi
Mar 16, 2021·Frontiers in Psychiatry·Morgane Guillou-LandreatJean-Yves Le Reste
Jun 25, 2021·The Lancet. Public Health·May C I van SchalkwykJim Orford
Jul 3, 2021·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Cheryl DicksonOlivier Simon

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