The Health Lottery

The Health Lottery
Region Great Britain
First draw 2011
Operator Northern and Shell
Regulated By Gambling Commission
Highest Jackpot £100,000
Odds of winning jackpot 1 in 2,118,760
Number of Games 2
Shown on
Website www.healthlottery.co.uk

The Health Lottery is a lottery in Great Britain launched in October 2011 where players choose five different numbers between 1 and 50. Players must match at least three in order to win a prize. It is operated by Northern and Shell[1] which owns numerous media outlets in the United Kingdom.

Eligibility

Players must be at least 16 years old and tickets are only sold in Great Britain, so it is not possible to play in Northern Ireland or the Isle of Man.

History

The origins of the Health Lottery predate the National Lottery, to the failed National Health Service Lottery which had an abortive launch in 1988, before being declared illegal. The assets of the NHS Lottery were purchased in 2007 by Altala Group Ltd, a company run by Ian Milligan, a former employee of Camelot Group, the operators of the UK National Lottery.[2] Altala went into administration in 2009, shortly before it was due to be granted its gambling licence, and was purchased by Health Lottery Ltd.[3] After successfully winning the licence, the Health Lottery was then sold in February 2011 to Richard Desmond's Northern and Shell group.[4] The Health Lottery launched in September 2011.

Draw

The first draws for the new Health Lottery were broadcast live on the ITV network during an advertisement break of The X Factor, paid for by Northern and Shell, and shortly after on Channel 5. Draws are currently broadcast at around 9.55pm on Channel 5.[5] It was initially planned to be hosted by Eamonn Holmes[6] but as Holmes was employed by Sky News, he was dropped due to a possible conflict of interest.[7] Melinda Messenger was confirmed as the host on 5 October 2011.[8]

On 9 November 2011, the Health Lottery announced that the Saturday night TV draw show would be extended in length to showcase where the good causes money raised is being spent, as from 12 November when it moved exclusively onto Channel 5. Natalie Cassidy took over as host from spring 2012, with Jenny Powell occasionally making an appearance.

To celebrate the 1 year anniversary of the Health Lottery, a new Wednesday night draw[9] called "Win Wednesday" was launched, hosted by Jenny Powell. This draw started on Wednesday 17 October 2012.

Since January 2014, the draws are hosted by Anne Diamond on Saturdays and 5 News weather presenter Sian Welby on Wednesdays.

Prizes

Players must choose five different numbers between 1 and 50, or can opt for their numbers to be selected randomly by machine. The cost of one ticket to play is £1.

The previous prize structure was as follows:

Health Lottery
Matching numbers Prize Odds of winning
3 numbers £50 (became £20 on 21 July 2012) 1 in 214
4 numbers £500 (became £250 on 21 July 2012) 1 in 9,417
5 numbers £100,000† 1 in 2,118,760
The overall odds of winning any prize is: 1 in 209.24

†Can range from £25,000 up to the above depending on total sales (see Section 6.17 of t&c's)

From the draw on 11 May 2013, there is the addition of a bonus ball number. The bonus number is drawn after the five main balls, and prizes can be won for matching 2, 3 or 4 main balls with the bonus ball. The new prize structure is:

Health Lottery
Matching numbers Prize Odds of winning
2 numbers free play∗ 1 in 16
2 numbers plus bonus £10 1 in 224
3 numbers £20 1 in 224
3 numbers plus bonus £50 1 in 4,815
4 numbers £250 1 in 9,631
4 numbers plus bonus £10,000 1 in 423,752
5 numbers £100,000† 1 in 2,118,760
The overall odds of winning any prize is: 1 in 13.94 [10]

∗Promotional prize: 16 Nov 2013 to 7 Dec 2013; 5 Feb 2014 to 1 Mar 2014; 12 Mar 2014 to 30 Apr 2014.

†Can range from £25,000 up to the above depending on total sales (see Section 6.17 of t&c's)

As of 2014, the top prize for 5 numbers is shared between the number of winners, as opposed to each receiving the amount as previously was the case.

Where the money goes

Breakdown of revenue
22.0% in operating costs, marketing and administration
20.3% to health related good causes
variable%‡ to winners

Controversy

The game has been criticised for donating only 20.3% of the ticket price to good causes, compared with 28% donated by the National Lottery. Spokespersons for The Health Lottery argue that the game will grow the market.[11] Some attention was also given to the possibility that favourable coverage of the lottery in Desmond's Daily Express and the Daily Star amounted to disguised advertising,[12] which was reported to the Advertising Standards Authority, who found the issue to be outside their remit.[13] The Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt announced in October 2011 that the Gambling Commission would investigate the legality of the Health Lottery, after questions were raised about the way the lottery was being run and the cost to smaller lotteries nationwide.[14]

Structure

Due to the requirements of the Gambling Act, the Health Lottery is not structured as a national lottery, but rather as 51 different society lotteries, each one representing at least one local authority area within England, Scotland and Wales. Each society lottery is licensed by the Gambling Commission and operates as an individual Community Interest Company, or CIC. Different CICs take turns in participating in a weekly draw so each week different CICs are represented and every region gets a share of the pot. Money is then donated to support health-related good causes within their respective local areas. The Health Lottery ELM Ltd operates as an external lottery manager to oversee the society lotteries. The ELM charges a management fee of 0.5p in every pound, which provides the profit for the lottery owners. The allocation of funds to good causes raised by the Health Lottery is determined by the relevant CICs and their partner charity, the People’s Health Trust, and not by The Health Lottery ELM Ltd.[15]

In 2010 this complicated structure was judged by the Gambling Commission regulatory panel to be "close to the line in respect of section 99 of the [Gambling] Act" and that while the structure was "capable of being compliant with the Act" it was "finely balanced". Concern was expressed that the individual lotteries were not to be combined into one de facto national lottery, as to do so would be a breach of the Act.[16]

References

External links