The Leisure, Lifestyle, & Lifecycle Project (LLLP): A Longitudinal Study of Gambling in Alberta. Final Report for the Alberta Gambling Research Institute

The Leisure, Lifestyle, and Lifecycle Project (LLLP) is a five-year prospective longitudinal study designed to collect data on the factors influencing change in gambling and problem gambling behavior over time. A sample of 1808 participants from four locations representing the diversity of the provi...

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Main Authors: el-Guebaly, Nady, Casey, David M., Currie, Shawn R., Hodgins, David C., Schopflocher, Don P., Smith, Garry J., Williams, Robert J.
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Alberta Gambling Research Institute 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1880/50377
https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/9908
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author el-Guebaly, Nady
Casey, David M.
Currie, Shawn R.
Hodgins, David C.
Schopflocher, Don P.
Smith, Garry J.
Williams, Robert J.
author_facet el-Guebaly, Nady
Casey, David M.
Currie, Shawn R.
Hodgins, David C.
Schopflocher, Don P.
Smith, Garry J.
Williams, Robert J.
author_sort el-Guebaly, Nady
collection PRISM - University of Calgary Digital Repository
description The Leisure, Lifestyle, and Lifecycle Project (LLLP) is a five-year prospective longitudinal study designed to collect data on the factors influencing change in gambling and problem gambling behavior over time. A sample of 1808 participants from four locations representing the diversity of the province of Alberta (Edmonton, Calgary, Lethbridge area, and Grand Prairie area) were recruited primarily through random digit dialing. In order to assess the development of gambling problems over the lifespan, five critical age ranges were targeted: 13-15, 18-20, 23-25, 43-45 and 63-65 year-olds. Individuals with relatively heavy involvement with gambling were over sampled. A broad array of psychosocial variables was assessed at baseline via telephone, face-to-face and computer self-completion interviews. The sample was weighted to match the population of Alberta according to age, gender, geographic location and the over sampling procedure. The three follow-up interviews of the cohort were completed by paper- or Internet-based surveys. Retention in the fourth and final assessment was 76.2% for the adult cohorts, 71.8% for the adolescent cohort, and 75.1% for the combined cohort. Three primary questions directed this project: 1. What are the normal patterns of continuity and discontinuity in gambling and problem gambling behaviour? 2. What biopsychosocial variables and behaviour patterns are most predictive of current and future problem gambling? 3. What etiological model of problem gambling is best supported by the longitudinal findings? This report provides analyses of the adult sample and focuses primarily on the first two of the primary research questions above - specifically, on identifying variables that are robust predictors of future problem gambling onset, the stability of gambling problems over time, and the development of a multivariate model that illustrates the interaction of gambling behaviour and problem gambling over time. A tentative etiological model is also presented to address the last research ...
format Report
genre Grand Prairie
genre_facet Grand Prairie
id ftunivcalgary:oai:prism.ucalgary.ca:1880/50377
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language English
op_collection_id ftunivcalgary
op_doi https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/9908
op_relation el-Guebaly, N., Casey, D. M., Currie, S. R., Hodgins, D. C., Schopflocher, D. P., Smith, G. J., & Williams, R. J. (2015). The Leisure, Lifestyle, & Lifecycle Project (LLLP): A Longitudinal Study of Gambling in Alberta. Final Report for the Alberta Gambling Research Institute. February 2015.
http://dx.doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/9908
http://hdl.handle.net/1880/50377
publishDate 2015
publisher Alberta Gambling Research Institute
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spelling ftunivcalgary:oai:prism.ucalgary.ca:1880/50377 2025-01-16T22:04:10+00:00 The Leisure, Lifestyle, & Lifecycle Project (LLLP): A Longitudinal Study of Gambling in Alberta. Final Report for the Alberta Gambling Research Institute el-Guebaly, Nady Casey, David M. Currie, Shawn R. Hodgins, David C. Schopflocher, Don P. Smith, Garry J. Williams, Robert J. 2015-02 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1880/50377 https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/9908 en eng Alberta Gambling Research Institute el-Guebaly, N., Casey, D. M., Currie, S. R., Hodgins, D. C., Schopflocher, D. P., Smith, G. J., & Williams, R. J. (2015). The Leisure, Lifestyle, & Lifecycle Project (LLLP): A Longitudinal Study of Gambling in Alberta. Final Report for the Alberta Gambling Research Institute. February 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/9908 http://hdl.handle.net/1880/50377 Gambling -- Alberta -- Longitudinal studies Gamblers -- Alberta -- Longitudinal studies Compulsive Gambling -- Alberta -- Longitudinal studies Institute Funded Reports technical report 2015 ftunivcalgary https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/9908 2023-08-06T06:30:23Z The Leisure, Lifestyle, and Lifecycle Project (LLLP) is a five-year prospective longitudinal study designed to collect data on the factors influencing change in gambling and problem gambling behavior over time. A sample of 1808 participants from four locations representing the diversity of the province of Alberta (Edmonton, Calgary, Lethbridge area, and Grand Prairie area) were recruited primarily through random digit dialing. In order to assess the development of gambling problems over the lifespan, five critical age ranges were targeted: 13-15, 18-20, 23-25, 43-45 and 63-65 year-olds. Individuals with relatively heavy involvement with gambling were over sampled. A broad array of psychosocial variables was assessed at baseline via telephone, face-to-face and computer self-completion interviews. The sample was weighted to match the population of Alberta according to age, gender, geographic location and the over sampling procedure. The three follow-up interviews of the cohort were completed by paper- or Internet-based surveys. Retention in the fourth and final assessment was 76.2% for the adult cohorts, 71.8% for the adolescent cohort, and 75.1% for the combined cohort. Three primary questions directed this project: 1. What are the normal patterns of continuity and discontinuity in gambling and problem gambling behaviour? 2. What biopsychosocial variables and behaviour patterns are most predictive of current and future problem gambling? 3. What etiological model of problem gambling is best supported by the longitudinal findings? This report provides analyses of the adult sample and focuses primarily on the first two of the primary research questions above - specifically, on identifying variables that are robust predictors of future problem gambling onset, the stability of gambling problems over time, and the development of a multivariate model that illustrates the interaction of gambling behaviour and problem gambling over time. A tentative etiological model is also presented to address the last research ... Report Grand Prairie PRISM - University of Calgary Digital Repository
spellingShingle Gambling -- Alberta -- Longitudinal studies
Gamblers -- Alberta -- Longitudinal studies
Compulsive Gambling -- Alberta -- Longitudinal studies
Institute Funded Reports
el-Guebaly, Nady
Casey, David M.
Currie, Shawn R.
Hodgins, David C.
Schopflocher, Don P.
Smith, Garry J.
Williams, Robert J.
The Leisure, Lifestyle, & Lifecycle Project (LLLP): A Longitudinal Study of Gambling in Alberta. Final Report for the Alberta Gambling Research Institute
title The Leisure, Lifestyle, & Lifecycle Project (LLLP): A Longitudinal Study of Gambling in Alberta. Final Report for the Alberta Gambling Research Institute
title_full The Leisure, Lifestyle, & Lifecycle Project (LLLP): A Longitudinal Study of Gambling in Alberta. Final Report for the Alberta Gambling Research Institute
title_fullStr The Leisure, Lifestyle, & Lifecycle Project (LLLP): A Longitudinal Study of Gambling in Alberta. Final Report for the Alberta Gambling Research Institute
title_full_unstemmed The Leisure, Lifestyle, & Lifecycle Project (LLLP): A Longitudinal Study of Gambling in Alberta. Final Report for the Alberta Gambling Research Institute
title_short The Leisure, Lifestyle, & Lifecycle Project (LLLP): A Longitudinal Study of Gambling in Alberta. Final Report for the Alberta Gambling Research Institute
title_sort leisure, lifestyle, & lifecycle project (lllp): a longitudinal study of gambling in alberta. final report for the alberta gambling research institute
topic Gambling -- Alberta -- Longitudinal studies
Gamblers -- Alberta -- Longitudinal studies
Compulsive Gambling -- Alberta -- Longitudinal studies
Institute Funded Reports
topic_facet Gambling -- Alberta -- Longitudinal studies
Gamblers -- Alberta -- Longitudinal studies
Compulsive Gambling -- Alberta -- Longitudinal studies
Institute Funded Reports
url http://hdl.handle.net/1880/50377
https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/9908