Newsroom Regulation

Brazil expands remote support for gambling-related harm through public healthcare

A new free SUS telehealth service adds a practical support channel for adults, families and support networks dealing with gambling-related harm in Brazil.

March 12, 2026 Editorial summary 2 sources

Brazil's regulated betting market is not only producing licensing and enforcement headlines. It is also beginning to generate more concrete public-health responses.

Free telehealth support is now available through SUS

The Ministry of Health says adults, family members and support networks can now access remote help through Meu SUS Digital if they are dealing with problems linked to gambling and betting. The programme is backed through Proadi-SUS funding and is designed to lower the threshold for seeking care.

The service is meant to be practical, not symbolic

The federal communication office says the initial capacity is around 600 patients per month. Access runs through the Meu SUS Digital app, where users can complete an evidence-based self-test and move toward support in a more private format than a traditional in-person first contact.

Why the gambling industry should pay attention

This matters because a market starts to look more mature when player-protection infrastructure becomes visible outside operator compliance pages. Support pathways, self-exclusion tools and treatment access are all signals that authorities are trying to build a broader system around regulated betting.

For a broader international summary in English, see OddsRex.

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