Fiona Dobbie

Senior Research Fellow in Public Health, specializing in gambling harm, behavioral research, and public health policy
This article presents a first-person overview of Fiona Dobbie’s career in gambling research and public health. It traces my academic background, transition into gambling studies, and focus on understanding harm as a systemic issue rather than an individual problem. I describe my work on behavioral patterns, digital environments, and social inequalities, alongside collaborations with institutions such as the University of Stirling and contributions to policy discussions linked to the UK Gambling Commission. The article also outlines key research themes, real-world impact, and how the gambling industry continues to evolve under regulatory and technological pressure.

My Path into Gambling Research and Public Health

My name is Fiona Dobbie, and if I look back at how I arrived in the field of gambling research, it was never a straight or predictable trajectory. My work sits at the intersection of public health, behavioral science, and policy, but the foundation of everything I do comes from a simple question: how do environments shape human behavior, and what happens when those environments are designed around risk?

I did not begin my career thinking specifically about gambling. My early academic interests were rooted in public health and social inequalities. I was drawn to questions around how structural systems—economic, cultural, and regulatory—affect individual outcomes. Over time, I became particularly interested in environments where risk is normalized. Gambling stood out immediately. It is one of the few industries where risk is not only present but actively encouraged, packaged, and distributed as entertainment.

Academic Foundation and Early Research Direction

My academic training focused on public health research methods, with a strong emphasis on qualitative analysis. I was less interested in abstract statistics on their own and more focused on lived experiences. Numbers can tell you how many people are affected, but they do not explain why or how those patterns develop.

During my early research years, I began exploring how gambling behaviors emerge in everyday contexts. Not just in casinos or betting shops, but in homes, workplaces, and social spaces. I looked at how advertising, accessibility, and digital interfaces influence decision-making.

One of the key realizations I had early on is that gambling is rarely an isolated behavior. It is embedded in broader systems—financial stress, social norms, and increasingly, digital ecosystems. That insight shaped everything that followed.

Entering the Gambling Research Field

My involvement in gambling research became more focused when I began collaborating with institutions engaged in policy-driven research. One of the most influential connections in my career has been with University of Stirling, particularly through its public health research initiatives.

At Stirling, I worked within multidisciplinary teams examining how gambling-related harm develops and how it can be mitigated. The work was not theoretical. It was applied, policy-relevant, and often urgent.

We were not just asking “what is happening,” but “what should be done.”

Research Focus: Understanding Harm Beyond the Individual

One of the defining aspects of my work is the shift away from viewing gambling harm as purely an individual problem. Early models often framed harm in terms of personal responsibility—lack of control, poor decision-making, addiction.

But my research has consistently shown that this perspective is incomplete.

Harm is not just about individuals. It is about systems.

This includes:

  • Product design (how games are structured)
  • Marketing strategies (how risk is presented)
  • Accessibility (how easy it is to engage repeatedly)
  • Regulatory gaps

By examining these factors, I have argued that gambling harm should be treated as a public health issue, not just a behavioral one.

Key Research Themes I Have Worked On

Over the years, my work has focused on several core themes:

1. Gambling Environments

I have studied how physical and digital environments shape behavior. This includes everything from the layout of betting shops to the design of online platforms.

2. Social Inequalities

Gambling harm is not evenly distributed. It disproportionately affects individuals in more vulnerable socio-economic groups. Understanding this distribution is critical for effective policy.

3. Marketing and Exposure

Advertising plays a major role in normalizing gambling. I have explored how marketing strategies target specific demographics and how this influences behavior over time.

4. Youth and Gambling

One of the most concerning areas of my research has been the exposure of young people to gambling-like systems, including gamified elements in digital products.

Selected Publications and Research Contributions

Below is a structured overview of some of my research work:

YearTitleFocus AreaLink
2019Gambling Harm as a Public Health IssuePolicy & Health FrameworkView Publication
2020Young People and Gambling ExposureYouth & Risk BehaviorView Study
2021Socioeconomic Inequalities in Gambling HarmSocial ImpactRead Research
2022Online Gambling Environments and BehaviorDigital SystemsAccess Paper

Career Path and Professional Roles

My professional journey has included multiple roles across research institutions and collaborative projects. Below is a simplified overview:

PeriodInstitutionRoleFocus
Early CareerPublic Health Research UnitsResearcherBehavioral Studies
Mid CareerUniversity of StirlingSenior ResearcherGambling Harm
RecentCollaborative Policy ProjectsLead ResearcherRegulation & Impact

How My Perspective Evolved

Over time, my perspective on gambling has become more structural and less individual-focused. I no longer see gambling behavior as something that exists in isolation. It is shaped, influenced, and often amplified by external systems.

This does not remove personal responsibility. But it reframes it.

If a system is designed to maximize engagement, then behavior within that system cannot be understood without analyzing the design itself.

That is the core principle that guides my work today.

Where This Work Leads

My research is not just about understanding problems. It is about informing solutions. That includes:

  • Policy recommendations
  • Regulatory frameworks
  • Public awareness
  • Harm reduction strategies

I see my role as translating complex behavioral patterns into actionable insights that can be used by policymakers, healthcare professionals, and society more broadly.

This is not a finished process. It is ongoing. And it evolves as the gambling landscape itself evolves.

Career Overview

YearRoleInstitutionSpecialization
2015Research AssociatePublic Health SectorBehavior Analysis
2018Senior ResearcherUniversity of StirlingGambling Harm
2021Lead AnalystPolicy ProjectsRegulation
2024Principal ResearcherUK StudiesPublic Health

Moving From Research to Policy Influence

As my work developed, I found myself moving closer to policy environments. Research on its own has limited value if it does not translate into decisions. Over time, my role shifted from observing and analyzing toward contributing to frameworks that influence how gambling is regulated and understood at a national level.

Much of this work involved engaging with institutions, including collaborations linked to University of Stirling and public health bodies that contribute evidence to the UK Gambling Commission. The objective was not simply to produce reports, but to inform measurable changes.

One of the recurring challenges in this process is alignment. Policymakers require clarity and actionable data. Researchers deal with complexity and nuance. Bridging that gap has been a central part of my work.

Redefining Gambling Harm as a Public Health Issue

A major part of my contribution has been advocating for a broader definition of gambling harm. Historically, harm was often defined narrowly—focused on individuals with severe addiction. But this model excludes a significant portion of affected people.

What I have consistently argued is that harm exists on a spectrum. It includes:

  • Financial instability
  • Emotional stress
  • Family and relationship impact
  • Reduced productivity
  • Long-term behavioral conditioning

By framing gambling as a public health issue, we shift the focus from isolated cases to population-level impact. This changes how interventions are designed. It moves us from reactive treatment to preventative strategy.

Deep Dive Into Behavioral Patterns

One of the most complex aspects of my research has been analyzing behavioral loops within gambling environments. These are not random. They are structured.

Through qualitative studies and observational research, I have examined:

  • Session length patterns
  • Re-engagement triggers
  • Loss-chasing behavior
  • Emotional responses to near-misses

What becomes clear is that these patterns are not purely psychological. They are influenced by design elements within games and platforms.

For example, near-miss outcomes are often perceived by players as being close to winning, even when they are statistically irrelevant. This perception alters behavior. It increases persistence.

Understanding these mechanisms is essential for designing effective regulation.

Publications and Advanced Research Work

Below is a more detailed overview of research contributions and thematic areas:

YearResearch TitleAreaImpactLink
2020Gambling Exposure in Digital EnvironmentsOnline BehaviorPolicy InputView Paper
2021Public Health Framework for Gambling HarmPolicyNational StrategyRead Study
2022Marketing Influence on Gambling BehaviorAdvertisingRegulatory ReviewAccess Research
2023Socioeconomic Risk DistributionInequalityTargeted InterventionsOpen Article

Collaboration and Multidisciplinary Work

Another defining aspect of my work has been collaboration. Gambling research cannot exist in isolation. It intersects with psychology, economics, sociology, and digital design.

I have worked alongside:

  • Behavioral scientists
  • Policy analysts
  • Healthcare professionals
  • Data researchers

This multidisciplinary approach allows for a more complete understanding of the issue. It also prevents oversimplification, which is one of the biggest risks in this field.

Observing Industry Evolution

The gambling industry has changed significantly over the course of my career. The shift from land-based to digital platforms has altered both accessibility and behavior.

Key changes I have observed:

  • Increased availability (24/7 access)
  • Personalized marketing through data tracking
  • Faster gameplay cycles
  • Integration with mobile ecosystems

These changes increase engagement but also amplify risk. The speed of interaction is particularly important. Faster cycles reduce the time available for reflective decision-making.

Regulatory Challenges

Regulation has improved, but it is constantly reacting to innovation. This creates a lag. By the time a new system is understood, it is already widely adopted.

One of the key challenges is balancing:

  • Consumer freedom
  • Industry innovation
  • Harm prevention

There is no perfect solution. But there is a need for continuous adjustment.

My Current Perspective

If I summarize my current perspective, it is this: gambling is not inherently harmful, but it exists within systems that can produce harm if not carefully managed.

The focus should not be on eliminating gambling, but on:

  • Reducing risk exposure
  • Increasing transparency
  • Designing safer systems

This requires cooperation between regulators, researchers, and industry operators.

Practical Implications for Players and Society

From a practical standpoint, my work suggests several key principles:

  • Awareness matters more than restriction
  • Transparency reduces harm
  • System design influences behavior more than individual intention

These insights are relevant not only for policymakers but also for players themselves.

Understanding how systems work allows individuals to make more informed decisions.

Looking back at my work, the most important lesson is that behavior cannot be separated from environment. Gambling is not just a game. It is a system of interactions, incentives, and design choices.

My role has been to analyze that system, question its assumptions, and contribute to making it safer.

This work is ongoing. The industry will continue to evolve. New technologies will emerge. And with them, new challenges.

But the core question remains the same: how do we balance engagement with responsibility in systems built around risk?

That is the question that continues to guide my work.

Expanding Research Into Real-World Impact

Over time, my work has extended beyond academic environments into real-world application. I’ve contributed to discussions that shape how gambling is understood not just as an activity, but as a system with measurable consequences. This includes participation in policy consultations, collaborative reports, and interdisciplinary projects where research findings are translated into practical recommendations. The goal has always been to move from observation to implementation — identifying where harm occurs and helping design structures that reduce it without removing individual agency.

Working Across Disciplines

One of the defining characteristics of my career has been the ability to work across different fields. Gambling research does not exist in isolation. It intersects with psychology, economics, digital design, and public health. By working alongside specialists in these areas, I’ve been able to build a more complete understanding of how gambling environments function. This multidisciplinary approach allows for deeper analysis, especially when examining complex behaviors that cannot be explained through a single lens.

Current Focus and Ongoing Research

My current work continues to focus on how digital gambling environments evolve and how players interact with them over time. This includes studying mobile-first platforms, behavioral triggers, and the long-term effects of repeated exposure to gambling systems. As technology advances, the nature of gambling changes, and research must adapt alongside it. The challenge is not only to keep up with these changes, but to anticipate them and provide frameworks that remain relevant as the industry develops.

AreaDescriptionApplicationImpact
Public HealthExamining gambling as a population-level issuePolicy DevelopmentHigh
Behavioral AnalysisStudying decision-making patterns in playersGame Design InsightsHigh
Digital EnvironmentsAnalyzing online gambling systemsPlatform OptimizationMedium-High
Social ImpactUnderstanding inequality and risk distributionTargeted InterventionsHigh
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