Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"Lelonek-Kuleta B" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Significant wins and their impacts: Predictors of problem gambling in French and Polish national samples Lelonek-Kuleta B; Tovar ML; Bartczuk RP; Costes JM; 39889363
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Experiencing a significant win and its sociodemographic and motivational predictors: A comparative analysis of pure-chance gamblers from Poland and France Lelonek-Kuleta B; Bartczuk RP; Tovar ML; Benoit E; Costes JM; 36409760
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Significant wins and their impacts: Predictors of problem gambling in French and Polish national samples
Authors:Lelonek-Kuleta BTovar MLBartczuk RPCostes JM
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39889363/
DOI:10.1016/j.addbeh.2025.108266
Publication:Addictive behaviors
Keywords:Big winGamblingGambling disorderProblem gamblingRisk factorsSignificant win
PMID:39889363 Category: Date Added:2025-02-01
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 The John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Institute of Psychology, Poland. Electronic address: bernadetalelonek@kul.pl.
2 Development and Evaluation Department, Association for Research and Prevention on Excess Gambling (ARPEJ), Paris, France. Electronic address: ml.tovar@arpej.eu.
3 Children's Memorial Health Institute, Warsaw, Poland. Electronic address: bartczuk@kul.pl.
4 Research Chair on Gambling, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada. Electronic address: jm.costes@orange.fr.

Description:

Aim: We examined the role of significant win experiences alongside psychosocial factors in the risk of problem gambling.

Participants: The study involved adult pure-chance gamblers from representative Polish (n = 3143) and French samples (n = 5692).

Measurements: The questionnaire encompassed socio-demographic details, gambling behaviours, significant win experiences, gambling motivation, and problem gambling.

Design & setting: Logistic regression analyses unveiled universal and country-specific factors significantly linked to problem-gambling risk.

Findings: Universal factors comprised gender (lower risk among females), age (higher risk for ages 35+), household income (negative association), current and past debt (positive association), type of gambling game (higher risk for games other than lotteries), and gambling frequency (positive association). Risk factors also encompassed heightened coping and social motivations to gamble, while the financial motivation inversely correlated with risk. Inter-country differences featured significant wins in the player's environment, associated with problem-gambling risk only among the French. Then, only the highest amounts spent on gambling in the French group correlated with problem gambling, while lower amounts in the Polish group also did. Notably, a higher problem-gambling risk was observed in the Polish group compared to the French.

Conclusions: A crucial finding was that significant wins were associated with problem gambling, even when controlling for other essential factors. Our study highlights the role of significant wins, construed as subjective gambler experiences, in fostering problem gambling. This insight suggests the need for a paradigm shift in understanding the role of winning in gambling, representing a risky experience regardless of the objective amount gambled.





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