Sherry H. Stewart: Researcher of Gambling and Addiction in Canada
Sherry H. Stewart is a Canadian academic and one of the most influential researchers in the field of gambling, addiction, and mental health. Her work does not sit quietly in academic journals – it shapes policy, informs clinical practice, and reaches the players, clinicians, and regulators who need it most.
She holds a joint appointment in the Departments of Psychiatry and Psychology at Dalhousie University, one of Canada’s leading research-intensive universities. This dual departmental home reflects the genuinely interdisciplinary nature of her research, which draws on clinical psychiatry, experimental psychology, behavioral science, and epidemiology in roughly equal measure.
General Profile
| Parameter | Information |
|---|---|
| Full name | Sherry H. Stewart |
| Academic title | Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Addiction and Mental Health |
| Position | Professor, Departments of Psychiatry and Psychology |
| Institution | Dalhousie University (Canada) |
| Editorial role | Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Gambling Issues (CAMH) |
| Main specialisation | Gambling disorder, anxiety, substance use, gender and addiction |
| Country | Canada |
| Based in | Halifax, Nova Scotia |
| Fellowship | Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada (FRSC) |
| Research funding | Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), Canada Research Chairs program |
Institutional Standing and Recognition
Stewart’s institutional standing was formally recognized through her appointment as a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Addiction and Mental Health – one of the most prestigious research designations available within the Canadian federal research funding system. Tier 1 Canada Research Chairs are awarded to researchers acknowledged by their peers as world-class leaders in their fields, with appointments typically running seven years and renewable once.
Stewart is also a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada (FRSC), which represents the highest academic honor the country offers to researchers across the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities. For a gambling and addiction researcher to achieve FRSC fellowship is a meaningful signal that her work has transcended the boundaries of a specialist field and achieved broad scholarly recognition that crosses disciplinary lines.
Key Research Areas
Sherry H. Stewart’s research covers a terrain broader than the label “gambling researcher” might suggest:
| Area | Focus |
|---|---|
| Gambling and gambling disorder | Mechanisms of problem gambling development, risk and protective factors, treatment approaches |
| Anxiety and substance use | Self-medication pathways through which anxiety drives substance misuse |
| Gender and addiction | How sex and gender identity shape addiction vulnerability, progression, and treatment response |
| Comorbidity | Co-occurrence of multiple addictive behaviors and mental health conditions |
The gender dimension of her work deserves particular emphasis because it represents a sustained contribution to a historically underserved area of addiction research. For decades, the dominant models of problem gambling were built primarily on male samples, with female gambling behavior either ignored or assumed to follow the same patterns. Stewart’s research has consistently challenged this assumption, generating evidence that women’s pathways into gambling problems, preferred game types, comorbid conditions, and treatment needs differ meaningfully from men’s.
Editorial Leadership – Journal of Gambling Issues
Stewart serves as Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Gambling Issues, published by the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) in Toronto. This is Canada’s primary peer-reviewed academic journal dedicated to gambling research, sitting at the center of the country’s scholarly conversation about gambling behavior, policy, and treatment.
The journal publishes original research, reviews, and commentary across the full spectrum of gambling-related topics, from basic behavioral science to clinical intervention studies to policy analysis. Under Stewart’s editorial leadership, the journal has maintained its commitment to methodological rigor while expanding its coverage of emerging issues including online gambling, sports betting, and the gambling experiences of specific population groups.
Relevance to Online Casinos and Canadian Players
- Evidence-based analysis of responsible gambling tool design and at-risk player identification;
- Research-informed responsible gambling messaging relevant to a diverse player population;
- Insight into comorbidity between gambling problems, anxiety disorders, and substance use;
- Editorially independent, evidence-based reviews of gambling platforms and player education content.
Her contributions to player-facing content are editorially independent. She writes what the evidence supports, not what any commercial interest would prefer her to say, and that independence is what makes her perspective valuable to Canadian players who want reliable information rather than platform-generated reassurance. Her research is publicly funded through CIHR and the Canada Research Chairs program and produced without commercial gambling industry funding – a combination that gives it a credibility and independence that player-focused educational content genuinely benefits from drawing upon.