1. Cross Validation of the Gambling Problem Severity Subscale of the Canadian Adolescent Gambling Index (CAGI/GPSS) on a Sample of Ontario High School Students
- Author
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Jing Shi, Angela Boak, Robert E. Mann, Nigel E. Turner, Jamie Wiebe, Tara Elton-Marshall, and Mark van der Maas
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Sociology and Political Science ,Substance-Related Disorders ,030508 substance abuse ,GPSS ,Validity ,Sample (statistics) ,Cross-validation ,Problem gambling ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Problem severity ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Students ,Psychiatry ,Video game ,General Psychology ,computer.programming_language ,Ontario ,Original Paper ,Psychometrics properties ,Reproducibility of Results ,medicine.disease ,Health Surveys ,Adolescent gambling ,Behavior, Addictive ,Substance abuse ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Video Games ,Adolescent Behavior ,Gambling ,Female ,School based ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,computer ,School survey ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
This paper reports on the cross validation of the Gambling Problem Severity Subscale of the Canadian Adolescent Gambling Index (CAGI/GPSS). The CAGI/GPSS was included in a large school based drug use and health survey conducted in 2015. Data from students in grades 9–12 (ages 13–20 years) derived from the (N = 3369 students). The CAGI/GPSS produced an alpha of 0.789. A principle component analysis revealed two eigenvalues greater than one. An oblique rotation revealed these components to represent consequences and over involvement. The CAGI/GPSS indicated that 1% of the students fell into the “red” category indicating a severe problem and an additional 3.3% scored in the “yellow” category indicating low to moderate problems. The CAGI/GPSS was shown to be significantly correlated with gambling frequency (r = 0.36), largest expenditure (r = 0.37), sex (more likely to be male) (r = −0.19), lower school marks (r = −0.07), hazardous drinking, (r = 0.16), problem video game play (r = 0.16), as well as substance abuse. The CAGI/GPSS was cross validated using a shorted version of the short SOGS, r = 0.48. In addition the CAGI/GPSS and short SOGS produced very similar patterns of correlations results. The results support the validity and reliability of the CAGI/GPSS as a measure of gambling problems among adolescents.
- Published
- 2017
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