Defining Harm Reduction as Part of a Public Health Approach Towards Gambling

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_43BDA7FBB127
Type
A part of a book
Publication sub-type
Chapter: chapter ou part
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Defining Harm Reduction as Part of a Public Health Approach Towards Gambling
Title of the book
Harm Reduction for Gambling
Author(s)
Simon Olivier, Savary Jean-Félix, Guarrasi Gabriel, Dickson Cheryl
Publisher
Routledge
ISBN
9780429490750
Publication state
Published
Issued date
06/12/2019
Chapter
7
Pages
71-77
Language
english
Abstract
This chapter presents the concept of harm reduction (HR), which was developed in the 1980s in response to prevention issues related to the intravenous use of psychoactive substances. It became progressively integrated with the public health approach for addictive behaviours. In its current definitions, HR concerns the laws, programmes and practices principally aimed at reducing negative consequences associated with legal and illegal substance consumption, both in the health sector and socioeconomic levels, without necessarily reducing consumption itself. HR finds its legal grounding in constitutional and international law, particularly the international conventions on human rights. In terms of problem gambling, public policies have for a long time mirrored the efforts of operators as part of their corporate social responsibility, known generically as “responsible gambling”. This approach centres on providing information to players and applying limitation and exclusion measures. HR differs from “responsible gambling” in that it does not primarily focus on problem gambling, the preservation of interests of recreational players and the industry but on reducing the burden of problems upon society at-large and its citizens. This requires taking into account the conflict of interest resulting from the substantial contribution made by those who gamble excessively towards gambling revenue.
Create date
19/12/2019 15:45
Last modification date
31/07/2024 6:02
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