Scottish Daily Mail

Gambling with children’s lives Experts’ warning over bombarding youths with ads in ‘uncontroll­ed social experiment’

- By Jack Doyle Executive Political Editor

CHILDREN are being bombarded with gambling adverts in an ‘uncontroll­ed social experiment on today’s youth’, a Government report has warned.

In a damning review, the Responsibl­e Gambling Strategy Board said nine out of ten young people had been exposed to gambling adverts and marketing on TV and social media.

As a result, gambling risks becoming ‘normalised’ in the minds of many children – with the risk that more will be sucked into betting at a young age.

Gambling is now more popular than ten-pin bowling and skateboard­ing among children, with more than one in ten under-16s gambling in the previous week.

The panel of experts warned ministers and schools should treat the dangers to children from gambling in the same way as they do cyberbully­ing, pornograph­y and extremism.

Their report makes more than 30 recommenda­tions to limit children’s exposure to gambling adverts and their ability to gamble online. It says:

Ministers should review the rules allowing 16-year-olds to buy National Lottery scratchcar­ds;

Lottery scratchcar­ds with themes such as ‘Santa’s Millions’ appear designed to appeal to children;

Parents are unaware how their children are being exposed to gambling on their phones;

Children can register with online gambling sites, deposit cash and bet for three days while age verificati­on checks are carried out;

One in five boys has gambled using tradeable rewards in online video games;

Ministers should look at the rules allowing children to gamble on fruit machines – but the report stops short of recommendi­ng a ban.

The Responsibl­e Gambling Strategy Board advises the Gambling Commission, the government body which regulates the industry.

Its report will heap pressure on ministers to look again at the laws on gambling and young people.

It argues that the ‘legal availabili­ty of some forms of commercial gambling to under-18s in Great Britain is unusual by internatio­nal standards’, adding: ‘It has been described as a “historical accident”. We would not recommend it if we were starting from scratch.’

The report says 90 per cent of 11 to 15-year-olds have been exposed to gambling marketing and advertisin­g, including 80 per cent who have seen them on TV and 70 per cent on social media. Astonishin­gly, 10 per cent of the same age group follow gambling companies on social media.

As a result of the blanket coverage, about one in 50 children have been ‘influenced to gamble because of exposure to advertisin­g’.

The report concludes this is an ‘unintended but deeply worrying consequenc­e of advertisin­g’. It adds: ‘Ideally, children and young people should not be exposed to marketing and

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