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Gambling, IT, booze addictions rife in Japan

By AFP - Aug 23,2014 - Last updated at Aug 23,2014

TOKYO — Nearly 5 per cent of Japanese adults are addicted to gambling, a rate up to five times that of most other nations, according to a study.

The study, released to local media on Wednesday, also showed rising adult addiction to the Internet and alcohol in a society long known for its tolerance of boozing and its love of technology.

“If something new becomes available, addiction will only rise,” Susumu Higuchi, Japan’s leading expert on addiction, who headed the study, told local journalists, according to the Asahi Shimbun newspaper.

The survey, taken last year and sponsored by the health ministry, came as the Japanese government mulls controversial plans to legalise casino gambling in certain special zones, with some saying it would boost the number of foreign tourists.

Low public awareness of the perils of gambling addiction — despite a robust gaming industry — separates Japan from other industrialised nations that are relatively more willing to talk openly about the problem, said a campaigner who has worked on the subject.

Researchers estimated that roughly 5.36 million people in Japan — 4.8 per cent of the adult population — are likely pathological gamblers who cannot resist the impulse to wager, the Yomiuri Shimbun said.

The study said 8.7 per cent of men and 1.8 per cent of women fit the internationally-accepted definition of addicts, according to the Mainichi Shimbun.

The wide availability of pachinko parlours — loud, colourful salons that offer rows of pinball-like games — and other gambling establishments is believed to be contributing to the problem.

The ratio of compulsive gamblers in most nations “stands more or less around 1 per cent of the adult population. So Japan’s ratio is high,” a member of the study group told reporters, according to the Nikkei newspaper.

 

Internet addiction

 

Gambling is everywhere in Japan, with pachinko halls dotted around train stations and along major roads, attracting many middle-age men, but also women and young people as well.

Betting on racing — horses, bicycles, motorbikes and speed boats — is also common, with horse racing featuring on weekend television.

“There is an absolute lack of preventive education for [gambling] addiction,” said Noriko Tanaka, head of campaign group Society Concerned about the Gambling Addiction.

Japan has allocated insufficient social resources to publicly discuss the problem, while more open efforts are made in the US and Europe, she said.

Open discussion of the matter is rare as Japanese people in general shy away from disclosing what can be regarded as family dishonour, Tanaka said.

“We are not calling for a ban on gambling and we recognise it has its own economic merits,” she said.

“But we must also discuss the negative economic and social impacts” of gambling, she said.

The study questioned 7,000 Japanese adults nationwide, of whom 4,153 gave valid answers.

Around 4.21 million adults are believed to show signs of Internet addiction, the study found, a rate that had risen 50 per cent in five years, the Nikkei said.

Researchers blamed the spread of smartphones and the increasing quality of digital content for the rising number of IT addicts, who often prefer the Internet over other essential activities such as sleeping, the Nikkei said.

More than a million people were believed to be addicted to alcohol, compared with an estimated 830,000 people a decade ago, the Mainichi said.

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