Key Highlights
- The Center for Addiction Science, Policy, and Research unveiled “Life Savings,” a comprehensive program addressing online gambling addiction through legislative models, state evaluations, and economic impact analysis
- Organization co-founder Nicholas Reville contends that gambling operators promote only reactive measures such as helplines, actively resisting preventive reforms
- The proposed legislative framework includes mandatory intervention requirements, prohibition of credit card transactions, increasing minimum age requirements to 25, and enforced cooling-off periods
- Preliminary reports indicate GLP-1 medications (including Ozempic) might decrease gambling urges, although controlled studies specifically for gambling addiction remain in early stages
- Reville highlights that platforms like Kalshi exploit regulatory gaps to provide sports wagering while circumventing state-level gambling oversight, prompting 36 state attorneys general to form an intervention coalition
On March 4, the Center for Addiction Science, Policy, and Research—commonly referred to as CASPR—introduced its Life Savings program. This comprehensive initiative addresses the growing crisis of online gambling addiction throughout America.
In conversation with Gambling Insider, CASPR co-founder Nicholas Reville expressed that current gambling policy frameworks are fundamentally flawed. According to Reville, the industry exclusively backs interventions that activate only after individuals have already developed severe addictions.
“Nobody reaches out to a gambling helpline until they’ve already suffered devastating financial losses,” Reville explained. “People don’t seek addiction counseling until after they’ve decimated their credit scores and wiped out their savings accounts.”
The Life Savings initiative encompasses three core components: proposed model legislation, comprehensive evaluations of consumer protections across all 50 states, and calculations showing the economic impact of online gambling revenue leaving state economies.
CASPR’s legislative proposals include mandating that gambling platforms must actively intervene when users display addiction indicators. Additional recommendations involve prohibiting credit card usage for gambling transactions, elevating the minimum gambling age to 25 years, and implementing mandatory pause periods when losses exceed predetermined thresholds.
Reville drew parallels to current alcohol regulation frameworks. “When a patron is visibly intoxicated at a bar, continuing to serve them violates the law,” he noted. “Identical standards should apply to digital gambling platforms.”
He emphasized that such reforms would particularly benefit younger male demographics, whom he identified as facing elevated risks of financial devastation through gambling applications.
Organization Questions Industry Claims Made to State Governments
Reville asserted that online gambling corporations have provided misleading information to state lawmakers. According to him, operators assured legislators that legalization would diminish illegal gambling operations. Contrary to these promises, he stated, overall gambling participation has increased in every jurisdiction that has authorized it.
He further disputed the notion that tax revenues from online gambling represent “free money” for state budgets. Reville contended that funds directed toward gambling platforms represent dollars diverted from neighborhood restaurants, local services, and other community businesses.
“Online gambling functions as pure extraction,” he stated. “It siphons money from residents without creating substantial employment opportunities.”
The organization’s 50-state evaluation system assesses the effectiveness of each jurisdiction’s consumer protection measures against gambling-related harm. These rankings exclusively examine regulated legal offerings, not offshore or unregulated operations.
Reville noted that the offshore gambling market has actually expanded alongside legalization efforts. He characterized the industry’s assertion that regulation would diminish illegal gambling as a “misleading narrative.”
Weight-Loss Medications and Regulatory Gaps Gain Scrutiny
CASPR has expanded its involvement into research concerning GLP-1 medications, the pharmaceutical category that includes Ozempic. The organization provides funding for the world’s only two pilot initiatives offering GLP-1 drugs off-label to individuals undergoing addiction treatment.
Reville acknowledged that formal scientific evidence regarding GLP-1 effectiveness for gambling disorder remains unavailable. However, he described the preliminary anecdotal feedback as promising.
“Participants consistently report that their gambling urges frequently diminish substantially or vanish entirely,” he said.
Regarding prediction markets, Reville criticized Kalshi specifically, alleging the platform markets itself as an investment vehicle while predominantly facilitating sports wagering. He noted the company’s integration with Robinhood and its exploitation of federal classification to circumvent state-level gambling regulations.
A coalition comprising 36 state attorneys general has formed to address this regulatory gap. Congress has received multiple legislative proposals targeting this specific issue.
Reville argued that every state has vested interests in taking action. Jurisdictions with legalized gambling seek tax compliance from Kalshi. States prohibiting gambling aim to maintain enforcement of their existing laws.
The model legislation from CASPR incorporates provisions specifically designed to eliminate what the organization terms the “investment contract sports gambling loophole.” As of late March 2026, federal legislative action addressing this matter remains under consideration.
