@article{efebbea537d1463fad25d1495f631d26,
title = "Industry interests in gambling research: Lessons learned from other forms of hazardous consumption",
abstract = "Research indicates that the evidential bases for many harm reduction policies targeting hazardous consumptions (including tobacco, alcohol and gambling) have been distorted by commercial industries that derive revenue from such commodities. These distortions are best illustrated by research on tobacco and alcohol, which indicates similar tactics used by industries to determine favourable policy environments through engineering of evidence, among other approaches. Although there is concern that gambling research is similarly vulnerable to commercial interests, the relevant literature lags far behind other fields and the aim of this paper is to increase familiarity with tactics used by industries for influencing research. It summarises the conceptual and empirical bases for expecting conflicts between goals of public health and companies that profit from hazardous consumptions. It also summarises evidence describing practices deployed by tobacco corporations, which include third-party techniques and the selective funding of research to manufacture doubt and deflect attention away from the consequences of smoking. It then reviews both early and emerging evidence indicating similar strategies used by alcohol industry, and uses this literature to view practices of the gambling industry. It argues that parallels regarding selective funding of research and third-party techniques provide grounds for strong concern about commercial influences on gambling research, and implementation of precautionary approaches to management of vested interests.",
keywords = "Alcohol, Gambling, Industry, Tobacco, Vested interests",
author = "S. Cowlishaw and Thomas, \{S. L.\}",
note = "Funding Information: Further parallels across industries relate to activities of third-party organisations and SAPROs. In the UK, for example, the Senet Group is funded by industry ( Senet Group, 2017 ) and is comparable to the alcohol industry's Portman Group. GambleAware is another third-party organisation which is advertised as an independent charity, but is funded by industry and includes representation from gambling and alcohol industries at trustee level ( GambleAware, 2017a ). Notwithstanding commercial linkages, GambleAware has a formal role in producing research on behalf of government (via the industry regulator) ( GambleAware, 2017b ), and thus affords industry with routine involvement in evidence production. Although there have been no systematic evaluations of this evidence, there are indications of negative outcomes from situating a commercially sponsored body as a commissioner of research. For example, a cursory examination of completed projects (excluding reviews and non-empirical activities) on the GambleAware website ( GambleAware, 2017c ) indicates only 24 studies involving primary or secondary data (and thus small amounts of evidence in absolute terms), while almost 80\% of projects (19/24) were awarded to contract research organisations or think tanks (consistent with tobacco and alcohol industry practices) ( Hawkins \& McCambridge, 2014; Smith et al., 2010 ). This is despite mechanisms that ostensibly support independence. These include a research committee comprising members with eminent reputations (but no domain expertise in gambling research), a research oversight panel including international researchers who have declared interests with the gambling industry, and a separate advisory body that determines priorities for large programmes (and also includes members who are beneficiaries of industry funding) ( Responsible Gambling Strategy Board, 2017 ). Such ostensible {\textquoteleft}firewalls{\textquoteright} from industry characterise gambling SAPROs in other parts of the world (such as the National Centre for Responsible Gambling in the US), and have also been criticised for providing weak protections that benefit industry rather than research ( Babor, 2016 ). Funding Information: Sean Cowlishaw has received funding from UK sources including the Avon Primary Care Research Collaborative, the National Institute for Health Research, and the Economic and Social Research Council. Further sources include agencies that are funded primarily by government departments (including through hypothecated taxes on gambling revenue) to fund gambling research, including the Victorian Responsible Gambling Foundation (Australia) and the Gambling Research Exchange Ontario (Canada). Sean Cowlishaw has not knowingly received funding from the gambling industry or any industry sponsored organisation. He has participated in scholarly and policy-related conferences and events which were sponsored by industry, but received no payment for involvement or expenses. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2017",
year = "2018",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1016/j.addbeh.2017.11.007",
language = "English",
volume = "78",
pages = "101--106",
journal = "Addictive Behaviors",
issn = "0306-4603",
publisher = "Elsevier",
}