Pictograms to aid laypeople in identifying the addictiveness of gambling products (PictoGRRed study).

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State: Public
Version: Final published version
License: CC BY 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_A3B0BC5B5E07
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Pictograms to aid laypeople in identifying the addictiveness of gambling products (PictoGRRed study).
Journal
Scientific reports
Author(s)
Luquiens A., Guillou M., Giustiniani J., Barrault S., Caillon J., Delmas H., Achab S., Bento B., Billieux J., Brevers D, Brody A., Brunault P., Challet-Bouju G., Chóliz M., Clark L., Cornil A., Costes J.M., Devos G., Díaz R., Estevez A., Grassi G., Hakansson A., Khazaal Y., King D.L., Labrador F., Lopez-Gonzalez H., Newall P., Perales J.C., Ribadier A., Sescousse G., Sharman S., Taquet P., Varescon I., Von Hammerstein C., Bonjour T., Romo L., Grall-Bronnec M.
ISSN
2045-2322 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
2045-2322
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2022
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
12
Number
1
Pages
22510
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: epublish
Abstract
The structural addictive characteristics of gambling products are important targets for prevention, but can be unintuitive to laypeople. In the PictoGRRed (Pictograms for Gambling Risk Reduction) study, we aimed to develop pictograms that illustrate the main addictive characteristics of gambling products and to assess their impact on identifying the addictiveness of gambling products by laypeople. We conducted a three-step study: (1) use of a Delphi consensus method among 56 experts from 13 countries to reach a consensus on the 10 structural addictive characteristics of gambling products to be illustrated by pictograms and their associated definitions, (2) development of 10 pictograms and their definitions, and (3) study in the general population to assess the impact of exposure to the pictograms and their definitions (n = 900). French-speaking experts from the panel assessed the addictiveness of gambling products (n = 25), in which the mean of expert's ratings was considered as the true value. Participants were randomly provided with the pictograms and their definitions, or with a standard slogan, or with neither (control group). We considered the control group as representing the baseline ability of laypeople to assess the addictiveness of gambling products. Each group and the French-speaking experts rated the addictiveness of 14 gambling products. The judgment criterion was the intraclass coefficients (ICCs) between the mean ratings of each group and the experts, reflecting the level of agreement between each group and the experts. Exposure to the pictograms and their definition doubled the ability of laypeople to assess the addictiveness of gambling products compared with that of the group that read a slogan or the control group (ICC = 0.28 vs. 0.14 (Slogan) and 0.14 (Control)). Laypeople have limited awareness of the addictive characteristics of gambling products. The pictograms developed herein represent an innovative tool for universally empowering prevention and for selective prevention.
Keywords
Humans, Gambling, Behavior, Addictive, White People, Judgment
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
31/12/2022 11:25
Last modification date
17/03/2023 6:51
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