House debates
Monday, 2 March 2026
Bills
Australian Centre for Disease Control Amendment (Gambling as a Public Health Issue) Bill 2026; Second Reading
10:25 am
Monique Ryan (Kooyong, Independent) Share this | Hansard source
I move:
That this bill be now read a second time.
The 2026 footy season is upon us. That means that, once again, our screens and our stadiums will be polluted with wall-to-wall gambling advertising. Our children will be exposed to relentless promotion of a harmful product that is driving a serious and urgent public health crisis.
Australians are the biggest per capita gambling losers on the planet. As a nation, we lose $32 billion every year. About one in seven Australian adults experiences gambling related harms every year. That's over three million Australians annually.
These harms extend far beyond financial distress into the realm of physical and mental health.
Gambling results in significant psychosocial challenges, mental health conditions, domestic violence, increased substance use, homelessness, self-harm and, in its most devastating circumstances, Australians taking their own lives. Almost 70 per cent of high-risk gamblers suffer cognitive, behavioural or mental health issues. Sixteen per cent experience suicidal thoughts.
Young people are more likely to struggle with gambling than adults. Eighteen- to 24-year-old gamblers are nearly twice as likely to experience harm from it, and Indigenous Australians experience gambling harm at almost twice the rate of non-Indigenous Australians.
The vulnerable are actively targeted by this predatory industry. According to the Public Health Association of Australia, approximately 40 per cent of gambling revenue comes from people who are actively experiencing significant gambling harm.
Those harms come at an enormous cost. Gambling costs my home state of Victoria $14 billion a year in social costs. This includes $3.3 billion a year in emotional and psychological harm, including depression, suicide attempts and suicide fatalities.
The Murphy report into gambling harm was tabled on 28 June 2023. Regrettably, in the almost 1,000 days that have followed, not one of the report's 31 recommendations has been responded to. That includes recommendations addressing gambling harm from a public health perspective, like establishing a national strategy to address online gambling harm or introducing a harm reduction levy on gambling companies to fund research, treatment and rehabilitation. During those 978 days, Australians have lost at least $70 billion to gambling. Many have lost a lot more than just money.
The bill that I'm introducing today charts a path towards addressing gambling harm as a public health issue in this country. Last year this parliament passed laws that established, for the very first time, an Australian centre for disease control. I commended the Albanese government at that time for taking this action. It's my belief that the biggest challenges that we face as a nation, from infectious disease to chronic illnesses, from antimicrobial resistance to the health impacts of climate change, demand a well-designed, coordinated and expert led response.
But the same is true of the health crisis caused by our national addiction to gambling.
This new bill, the Australian Centre for Disease Control Amendment (Gambling as a Public Health Issue) Bill, formally recognises gambling as a public health matter, and it will enable public health experts to produce evidence based reports and data on the harms of gambling, just as they have been empowered to do for other addictive and harmful products.
Recognising gambling as a public health issue treats gambling harm as a community issue, not as an individual fault. It shifts the focus from a personal burden to the need for systemic change—changes like advertising restrictions and community based education. It frames a necessary national response as prevention and early intervention, comprehensive harm reduction, the need to focus on moderating environments that promote access to gambling and the need to facilitate the use of evidence based policies to inform regulatory changes.
As a paediatrician, I'm really conscious of the need to promote and foster the health of all young Australians. Our children are being targeted on social media by betting agencies. They're being exposed to endless betting ads promoted by broadcasters and by our football codes. It's time that we took back control of the mental health of our young people.
We have to deal with the scourge and the harm associated with online gambling advertising, and we have to start by recognising gambling harm as an immediate and severe public health emergency. I cede the remainder of my time to the member for Curtin, and I commend this bill to the House.
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