JAMA Psychiatry

Sports Gambling and Drinking Behaviors Over Time

Joshua B. Grubbs 1
Alexander J. Connolly 1
Scott Graupensperger 2
Hyoun S. Kim 3
Shane W. Kraus 4
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2025-03-05
Journal: JAMA Psychiatry
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR6.241
CiteScore30.6
Impact factor22.5
ISSN2168622X, 21686238
Abstract
Importance

Sports gambling has become one of the most accessible forms of gambling in the United States, and recent research suggests that sports gambling coupled with frequent alcohol use may have deleterious health consequences.

Objective

To examine the trajectories of sports gambling frequency and alcohol-related problems over time and the associations between these trajectories.

Design, Setting, and Participants

This survey study was a 2-year longitudinal study conducted in the United States. Participants were recruited from a nonprobability internet panel from 2 sources: a large cross-section of adults matched and weighted to US Census norms and a specific oversample of sports-gambling adults. Recruitment began in spring 2022, and the last surveys concluded in spring 2024. To identify trajectories within sports gambling frequency and alcohol use problems, latent growth curve modeling was used.

Main Outcomes

At each time point, the National Institute on Drug Abuse–modified Alcohol, Smoking, and Substance Involvement Screening Test 2 was used to assess alcohol-related problems and sports gambling frequency was assessed by a single item.

Results

The cross-section of US adults (n = 2806) and oversample of sports-gambling adults (n = 1557) resulted in a total baseline sample of 4363 (mean [SD] age, 49.6 [16.2] years; 2243 men [51.4%] and 2120 women or nonbinary gender reported [48.6%]). Latent growth curve modeling revealed that alcohol problems decreased over time (slope = −0.059; 95% CI, −0.090 to −0.028). Sports gambling frequency did not show a significant trend over time (slope = −0.003; 95% CI, −0.053 to 0.047), though there was significant variance in this slope (variance = 0.024; 95% CI, 0.013 to 0.034). The trajectories of alcohol-related problems and sports gambling did not move independently, instead being highly positively correlated, suggesting that increases in one would correspond to increases in the other.

Conclusions and Relevance

This study found that over time, the trajectory of sports gambling frequency was associated with the trajectory of alcohol-related problems. Screening and treatment interventions are recommended for sport gamblers who also drink concurrently, especially because this group appears to be at an elevated risk for developing greater alcohol-related problems over time.

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