Gambling Nz Mental Health
Problem gambling is a severe mental health issue. Both New Zealand and International evidence agree that some groups within populations are more vulnerable to developing problematic gambling behaviours than others. Within New Zealand, Pacific people have been identified as the most at-risk ethnic group of becoming problem gamblers. Generic public health competencies have been developed by the Public Health Association of New Zealand. The generic competencies for public health were developed to provide a minimum baseline set of competencies common to all public health roles across the public health disciplines, including the problem gambling public health sector. Often people who gamble are also affected by other mental health issues, such as anxiety and depression, so you may need help with these too. Gambling also hurts other people close to you. Every gambler affects between 5 and 10 other people. If you live with someone who gambles, it’s important that you also get help and support for yourself. New Zealand Legislation publishes the Gambling Act which contains the formula used to calculate the levy rates. The Ministry of Health publishes the rates of client presentations to problem gambling services. The Government is using mental health patients as 'gambling chips' by implementing social bonds, says one social services researcher. Steve Taylor, a counsellor and social service outcomes.
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People saw poor mental health and addiction as symptoms of poverty, social exclusion, trauma and disconnection. They talked about threats to basic needs such as affordable and safe housing, quality education, meaningful employment, adequate income, social connectedness, freedom from violence and reliable social support. They explained how this leads to chronic stress on families, whānau and individuals and compromises wellbeing.
Access to health care. Access to education. Access to decent housing. Access to sustainable income – a living wage … access to proper social services. (Service user and provider)
Many people called for a mental health lens to be applied to all policies that shape society (for example, education, criminal justice, economics, care of the elderly and housing policies) and argued for prevention to reduce risk factors, such as alcohol and other drug abuse, homelessness and violence, that harm the wellbeing of individuals and communities.
By removing silos of thinking that compartmentalise where care is offered, we can begin to heal those whose life trajectories have been hampered by factors outside their control. (Māori professional organisation)
People placed particular emphasis on reducing economic deprivation among our children, mokopuna and young people, as child poverty paves the way for worse health outcomes in childhood, adolescence and adulthood. Young people identified insecure employment, spiralling housing costs and the burden of debt as major sources of anxiety. Similar social and economic issues were raised by under-served or marginalised groups such as the elderly, disabled people, homeless people, Rainbow communities, refugees, migrants and people living on long-term income support.
Poverty goes hand in hand with [poor] mental health. (Kaimahi Māori)
It is difficult to afford a healthy diet in New Zealand while earning the minimum wage where the majority of your income goes on rent. (Youth service user)
2.5.1 Local communities want more control
We repeatedly heard how poor mental health outcomes can become endemic within communities. We met leaders in communities devastated by the impact of easy access to alcohol and other drugs. People told us how whole communities, not just individuals, can become depressed or anxious, disconnect from each other, and lose the sense of trust and the ability to work together. They expressed dismay at their limited influence over important decisions that affect community wellbeing, such as the number and placement of liquor or gambling outlets and access to addiction detoxification (detox) facilities. They wanted access to national resources to create local solutions and sought wider powers to take charge of what they perceived to be the main drivers of poor mental health outcomes for their communities.
2.5.2 Discrimination remains a barrier
Numerous submissions described the impact of discrimination on the basis of mental health status – how it added to their mental distress and sense of alienation. Discrimination was reported to still be common in New Zealand society and within the mental health system. We also heard about the harmful effects of discrimination on the basis of ethnicity, culture, disability and gender identity. Rainbow youth and other marginalised groups reported not feeling safe accessing mainstream services and suffering harm from discrimination.
Sexual orientation, gender identity or expression and intersex status are not the cause of the elevated risk of mental health problems, addiction and suicidality among the rainbow population. Rather, the increased risk is due to stigma, discrimination, prejudice and exclusion. (Providers supporting Rainbow communities)
2.5.3 Loneliness and isolation
People talked about loneliness and isolation in our communities. They spoke of the need for stronger connections and manaakitanga, practical care and concern for the wellbeing of others.
Go and see your neighbour, take their washing off the line, cook them a meal. (Community member)
We were told that the pressure to be constantly available for work fosters anxiety, insecurity and isolation.
[We need] societal changes to reduce the pressure on people’s lives. Get house and rent prices back under control, stop food prices going up far faster than wages, make public transport useable. Jobs that respect weekends and evenings should be the norm, not the exception. If people’s lives are easier, mental health problems will be less frequent or more manageable. (Service user)
We were reminded of the forgotten patients in our system.
Photo: Karakia i te koroha, Prayer in the Wilderness, Chapel at Kenepuru Hospital, Porirua |
Gambling Nz Mental Health Assessment
2.5.4 Trauma is a key factor in mental distress and addiction
Many submissions highlighted trauma in childhood as the origin of mental distress and the trigger for counterproductive coping mechanisms such as addiction. People noted that steps to prevent or reduce the trauma of childhood abuse and neglect, sexual abuse and sexual violence, adult partner violence and bullying at school and work should be recognised as strategies for preventing future distress and investing in the wellbeing of future generations.
We were told that health services responding to mental distress need to get better at acknowledging and responding to the trauma that underpins ‘symptoms’, rather than merely offering ways to ‘dull the pain’. People noted that state agencies such as Oranga Tamariki— Ministry for Children, schools, New Zealand Police, the Department of Corrections, Work and Income New Zealand and mental health services can cause or exacerbate trauma.
A repeated theme was that intergenerational trauma can affect families and whānau and that understanding mental health through the lens of trauma requires a change in mindset and different approaches to healing for individuals, families and whānau.
Unless we provide trauma informed services the system will remain broken. (Parent supporting service user)
2.5.5 Alcohol and other drugs and addictions are tearing families and communities apart
People demanded action to reduce the harmful effects of drugs (especially methamphetamine or ‘P’) and alcohol, particularly among young people and during pregnancy. We heard from communities being torn apart by the P epidemic. Many people expressed concern about the ease of access to alcohol and gambling in our communities, noting their potential for social harm if not tightly controlled. They talked of our national ‘love affair’ with alcohol, how alcohol use fuelled their depression and suicidal thoughts or triggered violence and neglect of children. They called for decisive action limiting the sale and promotion of alcohol, particularly around children and young people (including sports sponsorship).
Gambling Nz Mental Health Benefits
What a great way to induce suicide, depression and multiple episodes of interpersonal violence. What a wonderful way to traumatise children – just have their parents exposed to alcohol in their early teens so that their problems are well established by the time they have kids. (Service provider and advocate)
Gambling was also seen as harmful due to its addictive nature and the financial stress and anxiety it causes families, contributing to neglect of children and family violence.
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Gambling Nz Mental Health Disparities
This book looks ahead and asks where the increased reliance on profits from gambling is leading in the long term. It argues that the rapid commercial expansion of gambling through modern Western democracies can be likened to the commercial expansion of other primary exploitative industries such as native forest logging in countries like Indonesia and Brazil. Both expansions are propelled through the interlocked interests of governments, international companies, and local entrepreneurs. While widespread native logging results in multilayered impacts on natural ecology, intensified gambling consumption results in complex impacts on the social and political ecologies. Furthermore, advances in new technologies are opening up the opportunities for exploitation on scales that were never possible before. As the chainsaw enabled vast tracts of native forests to fall, so the proliferation of poker machine lures increasing numbers of people into regular use. The profits generated by increased consumption establish and reinforce a network of relationships that are increasingly reliant on these profits. Key recipients include industry employees, government agencies, political bodies, media organisations, community groups, charities, gambling helping organisations and researchers. The book looks closely at how relationships to the profits from gambling create environments that generate conflicts of interest that in the long run discourage active and critical participation in democratic systems.