Gordon Campbell | Parliament TV | News Video | Crime | Employers | Housing | Immigration | Legal | Local Govt. | Maori | Welfare | Unions | Youth | More Categories

 


Smoking Laws Break Gambling Trance

Press Release

Smoking Laws Break Gambling Trance

The reported drop in the number of pokie machines in Queenstown is a result of gamblers having to go outside and have a smoke says Problem Gambling Foundation research director Dr Phil Townshend.

“Smoke breaks interrupt play and break the trance-like state that pokies can induce in regular gamblers,” he said.

He was commenting on reports that the number of pokie machines in Queenstown had dropped almost 25% from 144 in September 2003 to 109 by December last year.

Dr Townshend says the connection between smoking bans and a drop in machine use has been noticed nationally.

“The non smoking legislation is having a double whammy public health benefit by reducing both smoking and problem gambling,” he says.

Dr Townshend believes the effect will be most noticeable for problem gamblers because most gambling sessions only last 13 minutes.

“The smoking rules are likely to affect the 10% of gamblers that play for over an hour. These gamblers account for 42% of all the gambling that takes place in New Zealand and are the most likely to be problem gamblers,” he says.

Dr Townshend says that it is not surprising that publicans describe their clientele as more “mainsteam” after getting rid of pokies.

“Research suggests that most people who gamble don’t drink or socialize while they are gambling. This is remarkable as these are usually the most common activities in a bar,” he says.


Ends



 
 
Parliament Headlines | Politics Headlines | Regional Headlines

 

Questions of the Day:

Privacy Breach: ACC Reports Sent To Wrong Addresses

The report has two parts, a cover sheet and an attachment with further data included. That further data includes the name of the individuals, the type of injury they sustained and the cost to date. More>>

Education: Will Govt Introduce National Standards Training Standards?

The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is questioning how the Education Minister can expect professional trainers to successfully train schools to implement National Standards when the Standards are completely untried and untested. More>>

ALSO:

Sport & Local Politics: Wellington MP Blue Over Possible Loss Of Sevens

Labour’s Wellington Central MP Grant Robertson is asking sevens fans to sign his on-line petition to ensure the IRB’s New Zealand leg remains at its natural home, in the capital. More>>

ALSO:

Gordon Campbell: Free Trade With US More Monty Python Than Holy Grail

Perhaps we can all quietly sign a pact to forego comparing a free trade deal with the US to the quest for the Holy Grail. This ‘free trade as Holy Grail’ notion is a cliché that will not die, because the media loves it so much. More>>

Institutions: High School MPs To Upgrade Behaviour From Kindergarten Level

This is an opportunity for young people to be heard in the very chamber where this country’s politicians regularly debate legislation and the issues of the day. More>>

Smellie Sniffs The Breeze: Foreshore, Seabed, Agh!

Early reports from today’s hui of Maori and national leaders at Waitangi suggest a typically turbulent exchange, piqued this year by signs of how the John Key-led National-Maori Party government continues to change the way politics could be played in New Zealand. More >>

ALSO:

Ironies: ACT Calls For Harsher Penalties For Possessing Ten Thousand Spoons

ACT New Zealand Law & Order Spokesman David Garrett today welcomed High Court Judge Justice Asher’s call for the Government to review laws on knife possession, and agreed that offenders should face tougher penalties. More>>

ALSO:

Peace, Love: International Position For MP

Manukau East MP Ross Robertson has been appointed as Deputy Convenor of the Peace and Democracy Programme in addition to his role as a member of the Executive Board of Parliamentarians for Global Action (PGA). More>>

LATEST HEADLINES

More RSS  RSS

Gordon Campbell: Putting The SAS Back Into Afghanistan

Who has stolen John Key’s brain? The Prime Minister who only a couple of months ago was demanding to see a viable exit strategy before he would put New Zealand combat troops back into Afghanistan, has been replaced by a John Key impersonator for whom the vaguest of goals – combatting global terrorism – now seems like a darn good reason for doing so. More >>

MOST READ HEADLINES

More RSS  RSS
 
 
 
powered by newsagent
NZ independent news