Rachel A. Volberg

Research Professor of Epidemiology University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • Amherst MA

Rachel Volberg is one of the world's leading experts on the social and economic aspects of gambling, sports betting and problem gambling.

Contact

Expertise

sports betting
Economic Impact of Gambling
Gambling
Problem Gambling
Societal Impacts of Gambling
Sports Gambling

Biography

Rachel Volberg is one of the world's leading experts on gambling, sports betting and problem gambling, Her expertise has led to invitations to join research teams in New Zealand, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the United States.

She is the first researcher to receive funding from the U.S. National Institutes of Health to study the prevalence of problem gambling in the general population.

Social Media

Video

Education

University of California, San Francisco

Ph.D.

Sociology

University of California, San Diego

B.A.

Sociology

Aiglon College, Chesières-Villars, Switzerland

B.C.E. (A level)

Art History, Literature

Select Recent Media Coverage

Legalized sports betting creates new generation of problematic gamblers

Washington Examiner  online

2024-06-26

Rachel Volberg comments in an article exploring issues related to sports betting and problem gambling. Volberg says she has “concerns about groups in the population that are particularly vulnerable to experiencing gambling problems ... These groups include adolescents, young adults, women, immigrants and people in recovery from a gambling problem.”

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In Ippei Mizuhara’s text messages, problem gamblers see a familiar obsession

The Athletic  online

2024-04-17

Rachel Volberg omments on allegations against the former interpreter for Los Angeles Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani, who is accused of stealing more than $16 million from Ohtani to pay gambling debts. “The step of going from betting in a controlled manner and with resources you have and can afford to lose, versus tipping over into a loss of control, is very individual,” Volberg says.

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Study Reveals Massachusetts Casinos Fail to Fuel Problem Gambling Surge

Gambling News  online

2024-04-04

A new statewide population survey conducted by the Social and Economic Impacts of Gambling in Massachusetts (SEIGMA) research team at UMass Amherst finds the prevalence of problem and at-risk gambling has not significantly changed since casinos were introduced in Massachusetts in 2015. “We hypothesized that because of the clear exposure to casinos in Connecticut, we might not see the increase in problem gambling that often happens in the wake of the introduction of a new form of gambling,” says Rachel Volberg, and it was nice to see our hypothesis confirmed.”

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