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    General

    NHS Wales brings gambling harm care into mainstream health system with new helpline and treatment pathway

    Liam O'Brien · February 26, 2026

    NHS Wales will launch a specialist gambling treatment service and the Wales Gambling Helpline on 1 April 2026, bringing gambling harm support into mainstream healthcare with NHS led referral, treatment and aftercare funded through the statutory gambling levy.

    • NHS Wales will launch its first specialist gambling treatment service on 1 April 2026 alongside a national Wales Gambling Helpline.
    • The new service marks a shift from reliance on third sector support towards an NHS-led clinical pathway with referral, treatment, and aftercare.
    • The helpline will support people experiencing harm as well as friends and family members affected by gambling.
    • Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board will run the helpline and clinical service, funded at £1.3 million per year from the statutory gambling levy.
    • The statutory levy came into effect in April 2025 and raised just under £120 million in its first year, providing a dedicated funding stream for gambling-related harm work.


    NHS Wales will launch its first specialist gambling treatment service on 1 April 2026, introducing a national Wales Gambling Helpline and a new clinical pathway for people affected by gambling-related harm. The change marks the first time that people in Wales, and their families, will be able to access dedicated support through an NHS-backed framework.


    The new approach embeds gambling harm within mainstream healthcare rather than leaving provision largely to third sector organisations outside the NHS system. Welsh Government material on the launch sets out a national model focused on evidence-based support, prevention, and continuity of care, with the helpline positioned as the front door into specialist treatment.


    The Wales Gambling Helpline is designed to provide information, practical advice and emotional support, while also offering direct referrals into specialist therapy. The service is open not only to individuals concerned about their own gambling but also to friends, family members and partners who have been affected.


    Delivery will sit with Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board, which will oversee day to day operation of the helpline and associated clinical services. Welsh Government communications have noted that the board has experience operating national support lines, which is intended to provide a base for consistent delivery at scale.


    Funding for the Welsh service will come through the statutory gambling levy, with £1.3 million per year allocated to support the helpline and treatment programme. The levy came into force in April 2025 and government updates have said it raised just under £120 million in its first year, with those funds ring-fenced for research, prevention and treatment related to gambling harms.


    Welsh Government statements have also described the transition away from the previous commissioning approach, noting that existing support systems set up by GambleAware will remain available until 31 March before the NHS-led service becomes operational from 1 April.


    Wales is making a clear policy statement by placing gambling harm treatment inside the NHS. That move changes the framing from a social issue supported by charities into a health issue supported through clinical pathways, which in turn raises expectations around outcomes, referral discipline, and consistent standards across the country.


    The helpline model is sensible because it lowers the barrier to first contact and gives the system a single route into specialist provision. The real test will be clinical capacity, triage speed, and continuity once a person enters treatment. A helpline can manage demand signals quickly, but only if specialist therapy pathways have enough staffing and digital capability to avoid long waits and drop off.


    The statutory levy gives Wales a more stable funding base than short-term voluntary arrangements, but stability does not automatically mean simplicity. Clear signposting will matter, especially for vulnerable callers who may already be aware of other support routes. If NHS provision, third sector services, and national support lines appear fragmented, the people who most need help will be the ones most likely to fall between the gaps.

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    NHS Wales brings gambling harm care into mainstream health system with new helpline and treatment pathway

    NHS Wales brings gambling harm care into mainstream health system with new helpline and treatment pathway - General iGaming news

    NHS Wales will launch a specialist gambling treatment service and the Wales Gambling Helpline on 1 April 2026, bringing gambling harm support into mainstream healthcare with NHS led referral, treatment and aftercare funded through the statutory gambling levy.

    LO

    Liam O'Brien

    Thursday, 26 February 20264 min read

    • NHS Wales will launch its first specialist gambling treatment service on 1 April 2026 alongside a national Wales Gambling Helpline.
    • The new service marks a shift from reliance on third sector support towards an NHS-led clinical pathway with referral, treatment, and aftercare.
    • The helpline will support people experiencing harm as well as friends and family members affected by gambling.
    • Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board will run the helpline and clinical service, funded at £1.3 million per year from the statutory gambling levy.
    • The statutory levy came into effect in April 2025 and raised just under £120 million in its first year, providing a dedicated funding stream for gambling-related harm work.


    NHS Wales will launch its first specialist gambling treatment service on 1 April 2026, introducing a national Wales Gambling Helpline and a new clinical pathway for people affected by gambling-related harm. The change marks the first time that people in Wales, and their families, will be able to access dedicated support through an NHS-backed framework.


    The new approach embeds gambling harm within mainstream healthcare rather than leaving provision largely to third sector organisations outside the NHS system. Welsh Government material on the launch sets out a national model focused on evidence-based support, prevention, and continuity of care, with the helpline positioned as the front door into specialist treatment.


    The Wales Gambling Helpline is designed to provide information, practical advice and emotional support, while also offering direct referrals into specialist therapy. The service is open not only to individuals concerned about their own gambling but also to friends, family members and partners who have been affected.


    Delivery will sit with Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board, which will oversee day to day operation of the helpline and associated clinical services. Welsh Government communications have noted that the board has experience operating national support lines, which is intended to provide a base for consistent delivery at scale.


    Funding for the Welsh service will come through the statutory gambling levy, with £1.3 million per year allocated to support the helpline and treatment programme. The levy came into force in April 2025 and government updates have said it raised just under £120 million in its first year, with those funds ring-fenced for research, prevention and treatment related to gambling harms.


    Welsh Government statements have also described the transition away from the previous commissioning approach, noting that existing support systems set up by GambleAware will remain available until 31 March before the NHS-led service becomes operational from 1 April.


    Wales is making a clear policy statement by placing gambling harm treatment inside the NHS. That move changes the framing from a social issue supported by charities into a health issue supported through clinical pathways, which in turn raises expectations around outcomes, referral discipline, and consistent standards across the country.


    The helpline model is sensible because it lowers the barrier to first contact and gives the system a single route into specialist provision. The real test will be clinical capacity, triage speed, and continuity once a person enters treatment. A helpline can manage demand signals quickly, but only if specialist therapy pathways have enough staffing and digital capability to avoid long waits and drop off.


    The statutory levy gives Wales a more stable funding base than short-term voluntary arrangements, but stability does not automatically mean simplicity. Clear signposting will matter, especially for vulnerable callers who may already be aware of other support routes. If NHS provision, third sector services, and national support lines appear fragmented, the people who most need help will be the ones most likely to fall between the gaps.

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