Dr. Heather Wardle

Dr. Heather Wardle

Professor of Gambling Research and Policy University of Glasgow (School of Social & Political Sciences)
This first-person article presents the professional biography of Dr. Heather Wardle, a leading UK researcher in gambling, public health, and social policy. Written in her own voice, it traces her academic journey from large-scale population surveys to international leadership in gambling research and policy analysis. The article explores her core research themes, including gambling prevalence, gambling-related harms, technological change, and evidence-based regulation. It highlights her roles at major research institutions, key publications, and contributions to national and international policy debates. Overall, the piece shows how her work connects rigorous data analysis with real-world policy impact, aiming to reduce gambling harm through informed, public-health–driven approaches.

My Journey as a Gambling Researcher — Dr. Heather Wardle

I am Dr. Heather Wardle, Professor of Gambling Research and Policy at the University of Glasgow. My work stands at the intersection of public health, gambling behaviour, policy evidence, and societal impact. Over nearly two decades, I have worked to understand how gambling affects people’s lives, how technological change has reshaped gambling behaviour, and how societies can respond effectively and compassionately to the risks and harms that emerge.

This narrative—written in my voice—is not just about what I have done, but why I have done it: to better understand the human side of gambling, to inform policy, and to advocate for evidence-informed change.How I Became a Gambling Researcher

My academic path began as a social scientist deeply interested in population health, social policy, and behavioural trends. Early work in my career involved large-scale health surveys, including the Health Survey for England and the British Gambling Prevalence Survey. These studies offered a unique window into how behaviours like smoking, drinking, and gambling spread through populations, how they relate to health and wellbeing, and who is most at risk.

Gambling research appealed to me not merely as a study of behaviour, but as a lens through which we could see cultural, economic, and regulatory influences play out in real lives. My doctoral training equipped me with tools to design and analyse surveys, parse complex datasets, and ask meaningful questions about risk and inequality.

I realised early on that gambling was not just a recreational activity—its patterns of involvement, its harms, and its regulation spoke deeply to public health and social justice. This perspective has guided my work ever since.

What Drives My Research Today

My scholarship focuses on a few core questions:

  1. How is gambling behaviour changing over time, across demographics and platforms?
    My work examines transitions in gambling involvement, including the rise of online and mobile gambling formats and their implications for public health.
  2. How do technological infrastructures (internet accessibility, apps, payment systems) create both opportunities and risks?
    I study how digital innovations can reshape behaviours in ways that are neither entirely beneficial nor entirely harmful, but deeply consequential.
  3. How should evidence be framed and used in policy decisions?
    It isn’t enough to collect data; we must also ensure that research evidence influences regulation in ways that protect vulnerable groups and inform practical solutions.

My forthcoming and ongoing projects explore the impact of gambling products, gambling harms, and how surveys capture and interpret these phenomena.

Key Research Contributions

Over the years, my research has appeared in academic journals, policy reports, and public health forums. Below you will find a table listing some of my influential publications—each linked for reference.

YearTitleTypeLink
2026Gambling products, gambling problems and gambling involvement: analysis from GB & Health SurveyJournal articleGoogle Scholar
2019Gambling and public health: we need policy action to prevent harmPublic Health ArticleEurope PMC
2013Gambling behaviour (chapter in Scottish Health Survey)Research book chapterResearchGate
2020Problem gambling and suicidality in general public (England)Policy ReportGREO PDF

Among my works are systematic analyses of gambling involvement, policy framings of gambling and harm, and methodological contributions on how surveys capture gambling trends across populations.

Workplaces and Roles Over Time

While I have had various roles and institutional affiliations, my academic and research career has moved through a set of key institutions and projects.

Below is an interactive table showing my workplaces and roles.

Workplaces & Roles (Interactive)

Period ▲▼Institution ▲▼Role ▲▼Description ▲▼
2002–2015NatCen Social ResearchLead Gambling Research ProgrammeDesigned & analysed gambling prevalence surveys
2015–presentUniversity of GlasgowProfessor of Gambling Research & PolicyLeads Gambling Research Glasgow unit
OngoingFaculty of Public Health & Policy (LSHTM)Wellcome Humanities & Social Science Research FellowPublic health & gambling harm research
VariousPolicy & advisory bodiesDeputy Chair & AdvisorAdvisory Board on Safer Gambling

This timeline shows how my research evolved from large national surveys to academic leadership in gambling, public health, and policy influence.

Research Themes and Public Engagement

Over my career, I have observed that gambling research must balance scientific rigour with policy relevance. My work spans multiple themes:

  • Population patterns of gambling behaviour — how different demographics gamble and how behaviour shifts over time.
  • Gambling harms and public health impacts — quantifying and understanding the non-financial consequences of gambling.
  • Policy evidence and framing — how evidence is used in regulatory discussions and public debates.
  • Technological change and risk — the implications of online gambling environments.

To illustrate the diversity of these themes, the table below shows interactive research focus areas.

Research Focus Areas (Interactive)

ThemeDescriptionTag
Population Gambling BehaviourLongitudinal and cross-sectional gambling trendsprevalence
Gambling HarmsHealth, social, and economic impacts of gamblingharm
Policy Evidence & FramingHow evidence shapes regulationpolicy
Online & Technological ChangeImpact of digital gambling environmentstech

Reflections on Gambling, Policy, and Evidence

Gambling research has broad implications for health policy, regulation, and social understanding. My work aims to ensure that evidence is not only collected, but interpreted in ways that can meaningfully inform decisions about risk, responsibility, and harm reduction.

I’m proud to contribute to efforts that raise awareness about the public health dimensions of gambling, challenge simplistic narratives, and push for policies grounded in empirical understanding rather than ideology.

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