Black, Nicola https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7933-4833
Swanton, Thomas B. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5111-2534
Burgess, Martin T. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8852-1190
Gainsbury, Sally M. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9641-5838
Article History
Accepted: 2 August 2021
First Online: 16 August 2021
Change Date: 22 September 2021
Change Type: Correction
Change Details: A Correction to this paper has been published:
Change Details: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10899-021-10076-5
Declarations
:
: NB: None; TBS: Thomas Swanton has received a PhD scholarship and research grant through the NSW Government’s Gambling Research Capacity Grants program, funded by the NSW Responsible Gambling Fund, and supported by the NSW Office of Responsible Gambling. He has received honoraria for research advisory services from GambleAware, an independent UK charity that seeks to minimise gambling harms and which receives voluntary donations from the gambling industry.; MTB: None.; SMG: Over the last three years (2018–2021), Dr. Gainsbury has worked on projects that have been received funding and in-kind support through her institution from Australian Research Council, NSW Liquor and Gaming, Svenska Spel Research Council, Responsible Wagering Australia, Australian Communication and Media Authority, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, GameCo, ClubsNSW, Wymac Gaming. Dr. Gainsbury is currently a member of the National Council on Problem Gambling International Advisory Board (Singapore) and receives an honorarium for this. She is a member of the Steering Committee for Remote Gambling Research and the Independent Research Oversight Panel both run by GambleAware, which provide an honorarium for reviewing research reports and proposals. Dr. Gainsbury has received honorarium directly and indirectly for research, presentations and advisory services from RSL Services Clubs, ClubsNSW, Centrecare WA, Gambling Research Exchange Ontario, Department of Social Services, Community Clubs Victoria, Financial and Consumer Rights Council, Generation Next, KPMG.
: This study was approved by the University of Sydney’s Human Research Ethics Committee (approval number: 2019/213). All participants completed informed consent.
: The protocol and hypotheses relating to this study were preregistered on Open Science Framework prior to looking at the Wave 2 data and prior to collecting the Wave 3 data: .
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