La lutte antidopage, un “dogme inquiétant” pour certains

Interview for Stephanie Pertuiset @AFP on the Yannick Noah headlines around doping, published by a range of French newspapers, including Liberation & Le Temps. Here are some of the quotes from the raw invu in English:

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Why Anti-Doping Will Not Last

Presentation from Universitat Pompeu Fabra Law School last month

The Ethics of Sports

Unknown to me, I have a chapter in this Reader published by Routledge. My chapter focuses on the doping debate, arguing that concerns about health risk still dominate the ethical debate.

Social Media and the Olympics

Olympics + Doping

The Olympics, Doping and the Meaning of Sport: Performance enhancement technologies and the changing boundaries of human natureDate: Wednesday 5 October 2011, 6:30pm to 8:30pm Venue: The Millenium Room, The Carriageworks, Millennium Square, Leeds

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London 2012: the first Transhuman Games?

On 24th January, 2011, at 630pm @UWScreative will be hosting an ‘inspired by London 2012′ event at the CCA in Glasgow, host city for ICSEMIS 2012.

TOO BOOK YOUR PLACE, CLICK HERE

The event is FREE to attend and open to all. It will bring together a scientist, an artist and a philosopher (me) in conversation about the way in which athletes bodies and minds are being transformed by technology.

Today, elite sports find themselves in increasingly unchartered waters. More than ever before, athletes are using technology to optimize their biology for performance and many of their methods are not even tested for by the authorities. From genetic tests for sport performance to the use of superhuman prosthetic enhancements, this subject reaches parts that present-day anti-doping rules cannot reach.  These technologies have changed elite sports, as we know them, but the next decade promises even more of an overhaul to what we think being good at sport means.  As we approach the London 2012 Games, this debate will consider the ethical implications of new technology in sport, asking what distinguishes the cheat from the innovator. We will ask whether the debate about the ethics of athletic performance is all but over, as the winners’ podium makes space for the transhuman athlete.

Going beyond the familiar debate about doping and anti-doping, this debate will consider how far biology has been pushed by technical systems and what Jacques Ellul called the technological society. It will include Dr Yannis Pitsiladis, who works with the World Anti-Doping Agency on genetic technologies and live artist Francesca Steele (pictured here in an image by Simon Keitch www.simonkeitch.com), who became a body builder as part of her most recent performance work.  Along with me, we will consider how we ought to regard the future of sport and how it will function in an era of transhuman enhancements.

The event is presented by the University of the West of Scotland as part of ‘Knowing Sport: The science behind the medals’, a public engagement initiative of ICSEMIS 2012 (Glasgow) supported by PODIUM and Research Councils UK, Inspired by London 2012′.

Speaker Biographies

Dr Yannis Pitsiladis is a Reader in Exercise Physiology at the Institute of Cardiovascular & Medical Sciences in the College of Medicine, Veterinary & Life Sciences at the University of Glasgow and founding member of the “International Centre for East African Running Science” (ICEARS) set up to investigate the determinants of the phenomenal success of east African distance runners in international athletics. Recent projects also include the study of elite sprinters from Jamaica and the USA and the study of world class swimmers (e.g., why are there very few black swimmers?). He is a Visiting Professor in Medical Physiology at Moi University (Eldoret, Kenya) and Addis Ababa University (Addis Ababa, Ethiopia). He is a member of the Scientific Commission of the International Sports Medicine Federation (FIMS, and a member of the List Committee of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA). He is also a Fellow of the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM).

Francesca Steele has performed and exhibited work nationally and internationally since graduating with a BA in Fine Art from Northumbria University. She was awarded the Belsay Hall Fellowship in 2006, and has spent time as an artist in residence in various sensitive research, medical and rehabilitation settings including The Centre for Life and PEALS, in Newcastle and Horticultural Healing (a rehabilitation project for clients with acquired brain injury) in Plymouth. Francesca has performed at Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead and Arnolfini, Bristol amongst other UK and international venues. Her work has been featured in a range of publications, most recently Marina Abramovic and the Future of Performance Art (Prestel 2010). Currently Francesca bodybuilds specifically as part of her arts practice. The preparation for her current work began in October of 2008, since that time Francesca has trained as a bodybuilder. She won the title of Miss Plymouth in September 2009 and Miss West Britain (Trained Figure) at the National Amateur Body Building Association (NABBA) competition in April 2010, in May of that year she placed in the top six at the British Finals. From these experiences she has continued to develop her arts practice, through video and live performance work. Notably Routine, which was performed at The Pigs of Today are the Hams of Tomorrow (January 2010) and then the National Review of Live Art in Glasgow (March 2010).

and here’s my sport biography :)

Professor Andy Miah, PhD, is Chair of Ethics and Emerging Technologies in the Faculty of Business & Creative Industries at the University of the West of Scotland, Global Director for the Centre for Policy and Emerging Technologies, Fellow of the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies, USA and Fellow at FACT, the Foundation for Art and Creative Technology, UK. He is co-editor of Sport Technology: History, Philosophy and Policy (2002), currently on sale in the IOC Museum. He is author of over 50 papers on technology and sport and is author of ‘Genetically Modified Athletes’ (2004 Routledge), the first book to address this new science of human enhancement. He often gives pro-enhancement arguments, the most enjoyable of which was giving one such address to the IOC President Jacques Rogge and the Queen of Sweden at the Nobel institute in Sweden.

Muscular monkeys prompt sports doping fears (2009, Nov 12)

Muscular monkeys prompt sports doping fears
Linda Geddes, reporter

A gene therapy that appears to bulk up muscle mass and strength in monkeys – reported today in Science Translational Medicine – will undoubtedly raise fresh concerns about the potential for gene doping in sport.

We already know that some athletes use drugs like erythropoietin to increase the amount of oxygen their blood delivers, and steroids to bulk up muscle mass.

The big advantage with gene doping is that it should be harder to detect. That’s because it’s difficult to test for a protein that the body already produces, especially when its levels naturally vary between individuals – which might explain why some people are inherently better at sports than others.

In the new study, Janaiah Kota and colleagues at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, used gene therapy to add extra copies of the follistatin gene into the leg muscles of monkeys. Follistatin has been previously shown in mice to block myostatin, a protein that decreases muscle mass, resulting in bulked up “mighty mice”.
Monkeys injected with the gene also seemed to bulk up, and when Kota’s team analyzed their leg muscles with a device that measures force, they found that the muscles injected with the follistatin gene were also stronger than normal muscles.

They hope the approach could eventually be used to treat the severe muscle weakness associated with neuromuscular disorders like muscular dystrophy and multiple sclerosis.

Indeed, the drugs companies Amgen and Wyeth are already experimenting with drugs called myostatin inhibitors in humans, with some promising early results.

Such studies have already prompted fears about the potential for myostatin inhibitors to be abused by athletes hoping to gain the competitive edge. If gene therapy can achieve similar outcomes in humans, such modifications will be even harder to detect.

The World Anti-Doping Authority has already prohibited the use of gene doping within their World Anti-Doping code, and while there is currently no hard evidence of athletes using gene doping to improve performance, there are strong suspicions that they will start doing so soon – unless someone figures out a reliable way of detecting it.

Human Enhancement

 

The Brocher Foundation, and the Universities of Oxford and Geneva are pleased to announce the Symposium:

Human Enhancement: What should be permitted?
20-21 October 2009, Brocher Centre, Geneva, Switzerland
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________

 

Biomedical science is increasingly yielding technologies that can be used to enhance the capacities of healthy people, as well as to treat disease. This two-day workshop will aim to advance the debate on the ethics of human enhancement by considering

(1) What enhancements are likely to become possible?

(2) What enhancements will be ethically permissible?

(3) What enhancements should be legally permitted?

(4) What criteria should be used to answer 2 and 3?

THE PROGRAMME WILL INCLUDE SESSIONS ON:

Enhancement in sport

Life extension

Neuro-enhancement

Enhancement in general

The full list of speakers/respondents is: Eric Juengst, Paul Root Wolpe, Hank Greely, John Harris, Tom Murray, Gaia Barazzetti, Aubrey de Grey, Mike McNamee, Andy Miah, Stella Reiter-Theil, Ilina Singh, Astrid Stuckelberger, Sigmund Loland, Nicole Vincent, Massimo Reichlin, Ingmar Persson, Margareta Baddeley, Julian Savulescu, Alex Mauron, Bengt Kayser, Verner Moller, Tom Douglas, Norm Fost (TBC).

ORGANISERS

Julian Savulescu, Alexandre Mauron, Bengt Kayser, Verner Moller, Tom Douglas

TO ATTEND THE EVENT,

you are kindly requested to fill in the registration form and to send it back to the Brocher Foundation by mail, e-mail or fax before 5 October 2009. Places are limited and will be allocated on a first come first served basis.

Fondation Brocher
471 rte d’Hermance, 1248 Hermance, Switzerland
E-mail: scientificprog@brocher.ch
Fax: 0041 22 751 93 91

Here are some notes from the day:

Enhancement in sport (chaired by Julian Savulescu, Oxford)

0930 – 1020: Anti-doping: Not the only matter of concern for elite sport

Bengt Kayser (Director, Institut des Sciences du Mouvement et de la Médecine du Sport, University of Geneva)

Discuses cases of enhancement use throughout life

-       21 med student uses ritalin

-       75 retired athlète

anti-doping leading to excessive surveillance in sport

more harm to society than it prevents

slippery slope

arg against doping – against rules

doping-like behaviour – conduite dopante

why anti-doping rule ?

-       fair play, health, rôle model, spirit of sport

thèse reasons for anti-doping are flawed

what is the objective ?

-       eradication?

  • no

-       decrease prevalence?

-       decrease prevalence in mass sport ?

-       decrease in society ?

talk about GPS tracking

-       to identify athlete’s whereabouts

for 2012 Olympic Games – condition of entry to search athletes

false negatives

false positives

why do people transges

new law in france (2008) – 5 yrs in prison and €75,000 for possession for trade

strict liability – presumption of guilt as reversal of justice

Article 6 (2) ECHR – presumed innocent until proven

Can anti-doping be successful?

-       illusion

-       shows signs of fantacism

side effects

-       public belief that doping works

-       hidden because illegal

-       criminalization

-       dangerous behaviour

increase in prevalence

other problems

-       other collateral damage

Respondent: Mike McNamee (Professor of Applied Ethics, Swansea University, Wales)

Privacy – public and private distinction – with internet now, why should this worry us particularly?

Why does cost of strict liability rule matter so much?

If someone forcibly injected with steroid, would not have been their fault.

If different syste and don’t test, but only advise, is sports world culpable?

Clean sport and doped society

-       if likely, then still sport could claim desire to maintain freedom from these technologies

ME: if society accepts medicalization of enhancement, can sports prevent such freedoms?

Strict liability – not an attribution of guilt, but of negligence

Can never prove intentionality of doping behaviour

John harris: this debate is bedevilled by confusion about the debate – rules can be whatever people want them to be – prob comes when dress up anti-doping as if is an ethical issue – not an ethical issue, is a matter of the sport’s rules –

Julian Savulescu – test only for health thresholds – rules also often about making better spectacle – what makes sport more exciting?

1020 – 1110:                                     The Ethics of Sport Enhancement and the Meaning of Sport

Tom Murray (President of The Hastings Center)

Why baseball is the best game – john rawls

-       perfectly adjusted to human skills

Rawls – virtuous perfection of natural talents

Excellence in sports – 1) natural talents 2) virtuous perfection of those talents (that would be admirable for a variety of reasons)

ME: is it necessary for athletes to originate those things that they do as admirable? Of course, they replicate established knowledge

Are vaccines an enhancement – can protect against H1N1 but make us more

Enhanced interrogation – bush administration – ie. Torture – most would not regard as a morally valuable pursuit

Enhancement for what ends?

Implications for flourishing?

Individual and society concerns

Powerlifting (non-olympic) vs weight lifting (Olympic)

-       Jan Todd

Powerlifting as case study

-       use of drugs and shirts

fracturing of powerlifting movement

-       19 organizations in USA

Ernie Frantz – advert for the sport – no testing – but some countries do want to test

In drug free powerlifting association – likely that drug use is evident

Longhorn Open Championships  – award 109 trophies to 98 lifters competing

By 1985 – concerns that powerlifting had degenerated

Powerlifting – the shirts

-       assist in bench press – many layers of denim, Kevlar, etc

-       600pound benchpress in superheavyweight would be great in a raw event, but in powerlifting would not be competitive – shirts make the difference

system of justice – should be to accommodate whole system not just the athletes

claims of incoherency

line drawing problem – is any line going to be defensible

baseball 60ft and 6 inches

athletes we spoke to wanted effective doping control – reasonable assurance, not guarantee

non-trembling surgeon – point is not to demonstrate technical skill of surgeon

sport – point of practice?

reflective equilibrium

not the means

sport vs society

-       use of drugs in sport different from society

‘when you come to a fork in the road, take it’

-       if health is cited, isn’t it unjustified paternalism

-       would you ban low harm drugs?

-       Or permit all drugs?

Mehlman 2009 – handicapping of pure ability

-       but what about unearned adv due to pain tolerance?

How handicap?

-       how do you handicap for height?

In what spheres of practice do we insist that only unearned virtue prevail?

Far poorer world if we handicap people because they unfairly possess unearned advantages.

Respondent: Bennett Foddy (Postdoctoral Fellow in Bioethics, Princeton University)

If permit doping not right to say that choice to use harms other substances, when prefer to not use, cf. training hours

Coercive pressure in itself not a harm

If sport is about identifying most genetically talented performance, then why not count gender for eg?

-       ME: this isn’t what tom says

Admirable activities

-       why are enhancements less admirable comparing technologies?

Standardize equipment? Or remove it?

If about effort – then gender segregation can make sense.

Why not allow evening out of genetic differences

If about a close comp, why not handicap hard workers too?

Or award prize to biggest personal improvement?

Swimsuit – changed to floating and paddling, rather than slicing through the water

Lasik for tiger woods

Tommy john’s surgery

1110 – 1140:                                    COFFEE

1140 – 1220:                    Genetics and Ethics in Sport

Sigmund Loland (Professor of Sport Philosophy, Norwegian University for Sport and Physical Education)

Genetic predisposition can be necessary, but not sufficient

In short, embrace value of phenotypic superiority

-       more reliable than genetic test

agree that crude fairness argument won’t work

we are interested in justification for breaking rules

no problem that different systems of justice in medicine and in sports

-       ME: but what about their intersection? The purpose of medicine is to support individuals in undertaking activity that will be detrimental to their health.

Relevant vs irrelevant risk

Sport not about equality, but perhaps equal opportunity

It is meritocratic and interested in inequality – but not any kind

Thin interpretations – do not link to thick ethical concepts

-       Fairness – prosthetics vs ordinary legs’ body ‘in tact’

-       Sociologically naïve – not grown up people entering sports, but are reliant on sport systems to protect – coerciveness is a concern too – don’t see what it adds to sport

ME: sports competitions measure natural talent, virtuous perfection and technological competition

Don’t want to measure inequality of equipment but skill of athlete

-       ME: skill is not separate from the use of technological means

ME: you develop your natural talent in combination with what Jacque Ellul would call ‘la technique’ the combined ways in which science imparts knowledge to create technological systems which remove performance inhibitors or

Scepticism to expert-administred biotechnological enhancements

-       ME: imagine a world where all athletes go through an educational system while competing – many do, many do sport science degrees – in what sense are they not experts in their own administration?

If enhancement becomes the norm, how can sport deal with this?

Father of serena Williams actively looked for partner who could produce optimal genetic composition for athletic performance

Germline no role in sport – ME: so what?

Question: since we are advancing claims about what sports are, I would want to add to your and tom’s natural talent and virtuous perfection through the exploration of a relationship with technology.

Psychological enhancements more important – ME: but the swim suit is the psychological

Empowered athlete

Respondent: Ingmar Persson (Professor of Practical Philosophy, Gothenburg University, Sweden)

1220 – 1300: Who Guard the Guardians? – A Critical Reflection on Recent  Developments in the Fight against Doping

Verner Moller (Professor, Department of Sport Science, University of Aarhus, Denmark)

if anti doping is corrupt, then debates about what should be permitted are irrelevant

anti-doping officials have sacrified prnciples upon which anti-doping was founded and have lost credibility

Michael Rasmussen case 2007-9 – was overall leader of the Tour de France – alleged that he received warnings for whereabouts  – presented by press as doping possibility – pressure built up around him –

Marshall mcluhan – government by news leak

Danish Cycling Federation – has code it thinks is higher than WADA Code

Tom Boonen – also removed from Tour because of cocaine positive test – which is not an out of competition substance – why was this leaked to the press?!

1300 – 1400:                                    LUNCH

Life-extension (chaired by Verner Moller, Geneva)

1400 – 1450: The Foreseeability of Real Anti-Aging Medicine: Focusing the Debate

Aubrey de Grey (Chief Science Officer, « SENS » Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence)

Gerontology approach not sufficient – ie. To clean up metabolism

Instead, maintenance approach better

Do not interfere with metabolism

Longevity escape velocity (LEV)

-       rate at which rejuvenation

rate of progress

2 types of breakthroughs

radical vs incremental

e.g flight – 1903 aeroplanes, then rapid progress

Phonex and de Grey

Therapies double efficacy only every 42 years

Equity

-       would extending life widen the divide between haves and have nots?

-       Unlikely to be a problem – already v expensive to keep elderly alive

-       Correct precedent is not existing medicine, but basic education

-       Economically suicidal to not make available to everybody

Respondent: Gaia Barrazetti (Researcher, EPFL, University of Lausanne)

Translational process from research to implementation

Idea of life extension as ‘personal benefit’

Time for making a decision about reversing ageing process – as early as possible is ideal

-       ME: pre-embryonic?

Aubrey

-       It’s a question of too late, rather than too early – no point applying at age 20 or 30 as will not have accumulated much damage – better at around age of 60 when begun but not pathological

-       Distinguish between sociological and ethical

  • Sociologically, particularly difficult to implement.

Question: Life span vs expectancy

-       interventions have increase expectancy, but not span

suicide rate in elderly popuation highest

cell phone used to cost a lot, now available

ME: evidence that least affluent pay for the cutting edge technology

1450 – 1530: Anti-ageing: Results of a Swiss study

Astrid Stuckelberger (Institut de Médecine Sociale et Préventive, University of Geneva)

www.ta-swiss.ch

1950s – ageing as natural decline

1980s successful ageing

1990-2000

aging – failure of the

1530 – 1600:                                    COFFEE

1600 – 1650: Prevention and Life Extension

Eric Juengst (Professor of Medical Ethics, Oncology, and Philosophy of Science, Center for Biomedical Ethics, Case Western Reserve University)

Chloroplasties to prevent malnutrition

What doe ‘aging’ mean for us?

-       not simply getting older or wearing out

-       maturation  – growing older – progressing through developmental life cycle

case of my department chair at 65 – ‘I have the cv of a much younger man’

intervene in 11 yr old – freeze body in development so puberty postponed to allow cognitive development – would this view of promoting maturation fit in honouring life cycle – I think not

Beyond Therapy – cheating ourselves

The stages of life –

Dan Callahan – life cycle traditionalism

Respondent: Massimo Reichlin (Professor of Moral Philosophy, Università Vita-Salute San Raffaele, Milano)

World Anti-Doping Agency World Congress

WADA World Congress

Jacque Rogge

Not just about elite sport

‘it is a public health problem
-    ‘high school and university sports programmes’

‘hundreds of thousands of teenagers’

‘general sporting public’ – recreational

EU report doping risen from 5% to more than 20%

Raw Deal

Richard W. Pound

Joining of sport and government

WADC

Minister of Education, Spain

New Spanish law this year

FINANCE

Craig Reedie

Wada history

1998 – festina scandal at tour
1999 – world conference, Lausanne

Foundation under Swiss Law
Foundation board of 38
Executive of 12

Healh, Medical and Research (Ljunqvist)
-    List
-    LAB
-    TUE
-    Gene Doping

ME: where is Ethical Issues Review Panel??

EDUCATION

Presentation

Questons

Lunch

MEDICAL

Arne Ljunqvist

Key outcomes of research programme

Anabolic Steroids
-    disocery of desoxyMethylTestosterone
-    detection of 6 oxo compounds
-    method of detect aromatase inhibitors
-    devel of CRMs for steroids
-    proof of conversion of supplements into nanrolone
-    detection of new long lasting metabolities
-    genetic and ethnic differences in adrogen excretion
-    devel of in vitro syst to identify AS

Blood Doping

Third gene doping symposium in 2008

Food supplements
-    if needed, why? If irregular food intake, should correct.

Even within same bottle, some pills have banned substances and others not.

David Howman

160 tests of Marion Jones – not one adverse finding

Operation Gear Grinder 2005 – mexico

Doping and Public Health (2007, Aug 15-16, Aarhus)

Doping & Public Health
Arhus, Denmark, 15-16 August, 2007.

15 August 2007
10.15 – 10.45
John Bale and Richard Peel (Chairing sections)

Prof. Jens Evald, Chairman of Anti Doping Denmark – Introduction: Anti Doping Denmark’s Action to Protect Public Health

Prof of Legal Philosophy at Arhus.

background
doping and fitness
public health
fitness-doping
anti-doping denmark 3-year project

Background
Anti-doping denmark – independent
Act of Promotion of Doping-Free Sport (2005)
-    ADD is self-governing
-    12 member board
-    7 secretariat
-    ministry of cult = 1/3 of budget

Act 2005
-    doping control
-    info
-    research and development
-    international collaboration on fight against doping
-    provision of advice

Section 9
-    fight against fitness-doping (ie. doping use outside of sport.
-    requires implementation of WADA code in gyms.

Gov argument for fighting doping
-    public health
-    illegal trafficking
-    risk fo drugs spreading to organized sport

Public Health Issue

night-life violence increases by doping

effects of doping:
loss of interest in surroundings
social isolation
suspicion and jealously
new friends with own language
dress code and social code
can’t see anything wrong with own behaviour

big confidence
agrresion
depression
alarm
change in personality
lack of empathy
increase sexual self-orientation

how do users see these changes
- problem is that they do not see the side effects (ME: AS PROBLEMATIC)

ADD a ‘natural born’ protector?
- was never asked to form.
- today, have 70 of 450 centres in system
- working towards new model where commercial centres part of org

ME: is not talking to the political economy of doping (in Denmark). Like the dopers, is unaware of the context of own behaviour.

Is fitness doping a big problem?

Alesandro Donati wrote the WADA report, estimating doping on global scale
- the report mentions 15,000 abusers, the newspaper says 31,000

84% of sold growth hormone is used in sport
ME: but I thought many people believe most athletes are not using hgh, so where is this being used across sport?

also test for doping in prison – the prisoners trust us.

of tests:
0.6% positive in DIF
10% positive in DGI
20% positive in commercial fitness centers

number of positive tests has increased, but could be because of more effective testing.
(testing for steroids/, not social drugs)

some people talk about 60,000 abusers in denmark. we don’t know.

ME: what could improve knowledge. WADA talks about intelligence. it’s interesting for me to hear you throw out the 60,000 figure, given your own estimates. are there formal mechanisms for gathering intelligence and are they different from WADAs? come to think of it, what are WADA’s mechaniss?

Questions:
-    is ADD the right body?
-    Is fitness-doping a real problem to society?
-    which drugs should it test for?
-    can we accept social isolation of doping users?
-    what is lacking the most in fight against doping?

ME: what is worrying about isolationism of dopers? There has got to be at least two more premises to the argument.

ME: the fact that he is asking whether we test for social drugs is v problematic.

Questions and Answers

J: problem is that we cannot register the names of people.

Changes in WADA code allows making separate rules for fitness centres.

10.45 – 11.15

Asst. Prof. Paul Dimeo – The Public Health Origins of Anti-Doping

Key historical moments
- 1948: Dr Christopher Woodward raises concerns about cyclists’ use of drugs
- Late 1940s/early 1950s – returning war verterans and wide availability of amphetamines contribute to rising usage at all levels of American sport
- 1952 – WHO conference
- 1957 – AMAconference
- 1960 – death of Knud Enemark Jensen at Rome Olympics, attributed to amphetamine abuse through later investigations dispute this claim; Avery Brundage raises issue with IOC; British anti-doping expert Arnold Beckett claimed later that IOC knew about t widening use of steroids by 1960
- 1961 – British athlete Gordon Pirie publishers a book ‘Running Wild’ in which he claims some British, many American and many society athletes use doping drugs
- 1963 – CoE meetings
- 1964 – International Congress of Sport Sciences meets during Tokyo Games and prob of doping is raises, also exptl testing conducted on cyclists during Games
- 1967 – British Association of Sports Medicine conf on doping held in London
- 1968 – first testing at Olympics for amphetamines; test for steroids  would arrive in 1076.

(Dimeo, P. 2007. A History of Drug Use in Sport, 1876-1976: Beyond Good and Evil (Routledge))

between 1950s and 1960s, change in anti-doping
postwar period public health movement
questions about how sport played a role in public health
by late 1960s as sports orgs took control, tone of anti-doping changed to defensive of sportin culture and assumption of sport ethics. doping not defined as prob of too much intensity, but as a bleamish on utopia of sport. consequently, for public health officials who were more objective on health, had been lost. chance for moderation had been replaced by fanatic approach to the problem.
beginnings of shift from 1952 Februrary.
IOC had announced in 1933 that it did not like doping, but did nothing until early 1960s.
were not many instances at this time.
1948 Woodward
1949 italian ctyclist died allegedly of amphetamine
in US groupwing prob
first major statements on doping came from health not sport – WHO 1952
- 2 speakers talked: Carl Evan – Norway health – oppressive system – said ‘use of dope….popping up here and there in the amateur sports world….will be a disaster for sports’
- American colleague at the conf: Milton Lomer – Social and occupational health secretary for WHO, didn’t like look of sport – athletes pressured into taking health risks for national prestige. he saw sports in critical terms. he thought sports were to blame.  not clear how these speakers reflected view of WHO. no further action was taken.
June 1957 – AMA initited research studies on the subject. beginning of surveillance process. Herbert Berger narcotics expert – claimed dubious success of 4 minutemilers, but also critical of amphetamine use in college and high school in usa – widespread pattern of drug use ‘shocking and visious’ – saw it asa  public health issue. ‘drug addicts might get their start taking amphetamines in high school and college’. also said users displayed violent and criminal behaviour.

anti-doping among officials at this time
AMA projects on use of amphetamines another was a clinical study about effectiveness of amphetamines for performance.

this affected publich health stratgies of surveillance.
clinical studies were sign of honesty – though sports authorities discourages research on doping in 1960s.

in public health cntext, concept of fairness not visible
if anti-doping had remained focused on public health, then nature of antidoping would have been v different.

early 1960s, in UK Austria,
BASM and itlian counterpart established positions
CoE defined doping as an evil, such a view had become routine
like a religious doctrine
eg. IOC anti-doping Arthur Poierot, also Sec of BASM, in 1965: ‘doping is an evil. it is morally wrong…legally indefensible’. – at this time, no evidence to support any of these points
eg. XXXX immoral act of doping  ‘keep the ideal of sports pure for the welfare fo all mankind’

testing in Olympics by 1968.
guardians disliked modernity in sport – eg. training technology.

no interest to dialogue values
problem in their view was fringe element of sport ‘cancer’ on utopia of sport.
IOC wanted elitism, but with amateur values.
constructed a sense of sport that focused on excellence, but values that ddi not reflect reality of elite sports – inspired by indiv and national glory

how ddi early public health experts compare with later sports colleagues

similarities
both disliked drugs in sport, though for different reasons
both thought monitoring important

differences
if about health , not ethics, then must consider broader public
eg. alcohol – all allowed to drink alcohol and excessive can do, but if drive drunk can be prosecuted since affects others health. other crossovers – approach to alcohol has been realistic pragmatic and yet allowed freedom.

if sports doping had been seen purely as public health, would it  have emerged

ME: hmmm, medical intervention of doping might be a difference?

11.15 – 11.45
Prof. Barrie Houlihan – Doping, public health and the generalisation of interests

how politics is changing and how it might change.

theoretical presentation

theory of policy change

generalizing interests – building alliances with sympathetic policy areas

domestic and international policy making is hotly contested – many polic leaders are under constant pressure to give prominence to their issue and to protect it from others

2 questions:
- how can momentum and commitment to resources at domestic and intenational be maintained?
- to what extent can domestic and international sport interest control discoures….

Anthony Downs – policy ‘life cycle’
-    pre-problem stage
-    alarmed discouvery and euphoric enthusiasm
-    realizing cost of signif progress
-    post-problem stage

much of history of anti-doping follows this pattern

first stage
-    death of Tommie Simpson
-    withdrawal from 1983 Pan-American Games
-    1988 ben Johnson
-    1998 tour
-    2007 tour

each began with enthusiasm which rapidly dissipated

look at discourse that surround doping

3 dominant discourses
- fairness, health of the ATHLETE (not public health), image of sport (role model, etc)

these are generally self-serving, inward looking and politically naïve

WADA Code reflects mixed rationale
-    concern limited to athlete’s community

however, wada needs governmental allies
examine how these other orgs discuss doping – they use broader, social terms
eg. CoE – sport important role in protection of health, moral education, international understanding; EU – competence in area of public health; UNESCO Convention – education, health, development and peace
many govs have publich health emphasis on sport – France, Norway, Sweden, Denmark

Dick Pound – ‘unviversal recognitioj…doping serious threat to public health’

whether it’s being exploited, I’m not sure

but not only discourse

competing discourses:
-    constitutional: sport should be self-governing
-    criminal: doping is big criminal business
-    workers rights: right to eran leaving
-    moral/ethical: fairness:
-    medical: health of athletes, treatement
-    public health: doping spills into non-sport

constitutional, moral medical are most promiinant international, others vary between countries

WADA’s response?
-    is WADA aware that it is competing?

public health not exploited by sport

1998 – watershed
- showed weakness of ‘constitutional discourse’
- French gov intervention (and criminal discourse)

Continued discuss about criminanlization
need for sport to build a defensive ‘generalisation of interest’?

criminalization – ljunqvist – advocates criminalisation of sports related drugs

strategies for generalisation of interests
-    sectional interests (like elite sport) aim to further interest by linking to public good o
o    ‘one has to hrase one’s argument in impartial terms, as if one were arghing for the public good and not fornes own self interest’ (John Elster)

is linking elite doping with public health going to strengthen elite anti-doping?

back to initial 2 questions

discussions
-    what is existing relationship between antidoping and external interests?
o    what evidence is there of alliance building?
o    the evidence suggests that they are not.
-    are we seeking generalisstion of interests by sport to link with supportive external interests or the incorporation of sport by eternal interests.. – rather public health sees sport as valuable to them.

ME: is this because it would diminish the autonom yof WADA

parallel discourses?
-    internaitonl, still focus on athlete’s health, modest concern on public health and broader pro-social discourse on sport
-    domestically: increasing number of countries a crime/law and order discourse (encouraged by WADA?) but in others an increasing concern with public helaht and sport for al not just elite)

evidence of a changing discourse? sport still claiming tis privileges status (overplaying its hand)
sport/elite soprt has lways been linked with other non-sport interest

ME: how does this function with doping technologies that are not clearly linked to public health issues – e.g. blood doping or hypoxic training? Is there a challenge over boundaries – ie. doping more than drugs. difficult to excite public health policy makers about hypoxia?

ME: would a public health approach require the separation of some doping technologies from others? – ie. some have a clearly larger spill over than others.

what will keep doping on the front burner?
rely on continual succession of crises?
criminalization is easier than public health.
links to either run risk of loss of control by WADA and NADOs.
but criminalization makes more difficult harm minimization.

Verner:
don’t know if prob of doping, but we’ll solve it
in 1960s don’t know if was a big prob, but begin to solve
how politicians trying to solve.
problem generated by political ambition.

ME:mobiilisation fo anti-doping is often

Barrie: different to identify public health dimension of some doping technologies, but for others, it is clearly the case

11.45 – 13.00
Lunch
13.00 – 13.30
Prof. Claudio Tamburrini – Postponing motherhood: an unfair advantage?

follow up project on genetic technology and gender

trying to ascertain how genetics impact on gender equity in elite sports

from time to time here that women give birth after menopause.

none of the techniques to assist this are genetic, but is conceivable.

whether athletes who postpone motherhood gain advantage over those who don’t?
is this adv unfair?

when we speak of motherhood, not suggesting htat elite sports are not compatible with motherhood. some argue that it eventually enhances sports participation. (IRSS 2001).

but still the case that natural difference between mean and women still exists – women bear children and men don’t. so possibilitiy to equalise ability will remedy natural disadvantage.

do not take a stance on whether interventions aimed at delaying menopause should be considered treatement or enhancement.

does postmenopausal….

assume that gender equity is desirable, though this is contested by some.

possible that technology could create more gender equity.
-    eg. resistance to ART – reinforces idea that women should become mothers and limits value of fulfilment without children

Laura Purdy

even if decision makers accept homosexual families, better heterosexual since discrim, but this is not a good argument.

develop a ‘happy child’ criteria – but no reason why could not meet standard

reasonable happiness

postmenopausal motherhood discourse shows resistance.

lets assume many women will do this. impact?

change of family. but no harm in that.

assume that once mothers, will shortly die. need to ensure provision within the community.

no reason to oppose postponing motherhood.

perhaps the children might resent older mother.

sport obvious eg where having children is a disadvantage.
-    those who do not can remain productive during  their peak years.

is genetically postponing motherhood unfair in elite sports?

a substance or method will be considered if 2 of 3 conditions.

assume that the technology will become safe.

is it an unfair competitive adv?

if open to all, then how unfair?

perhaps expensive will create greater unfairness?

not suff reason to label it as unfair, according to anti-doping policy.

trying to underline sport governance of such mattes, when the become a scientific reality.

must search somewhere else to discern whether is unfair or not.

might argue that is unfair adv since put colleagues under tpoo heavy burden – renouncing to motherhood for the same of competitiveness

but all sports persons forfeit plans and put pressure on competitors to do the same.

perhaps the too heavier burden objection could substitute the current criteria, combined with some other form of consideration. eg. ethos of sport – rules out improper manipulation of the body.

ME: What sorts of things are able to become proper manipulations of the body?

hypoxic chamber might be risky if stay in too long, are directly enhancing, but unlike trad doping re ot seen as artificial.

prob is how the competitive adv might be seen by sports bodies.

given that men are fertile for longer than women,

ban on gene doping – what is the non-therapeutic use? possible to treat muscle disorders that might improve muscle strength.? gene encoded epo to boost bone marrow, might also increase for sport.

must be more accuratey specify unapproved aplpictions of genetic technologies.

need increased insight on potential conflicts between socially desirable goals and ethos of sport.

need for open and critical debate on how governing bodies should deal with people who are already modified.

the greater the possibility of other genetic technologies to equalise different, more reason to accept

13.30 – 14.00
Prof. John Hoberman – Is testosterone a supplement or a drug?

20 years ago. West German scientists Manfred Donicker said steroids should not become a popular nutritional supplement

2 months ago in Las Vegas – Intenrational Society for Sports Nutrition
- middle aged man on testosterone on prescription.
- he said, any man over 50 who is not on a testosterone product is crazy.
- ie. donicker’s fear hass come true.

we are talking about a contest between testosterone status

what is difference?

supplement

assume fewer regulations, since assume fewer risks

I will argue that, in order to understand this, must look at history of synthetic tesosterone and realise that campaign to market to the masses

ME: big deal.

Time Magazine
sept 23, 1935
“german and swiss chemical laboratories are already prepared said Dr Ruzicka [one nobel later] last week, to manufacture from sheep’s wool all the testosterone t world needs to cure homosexuals, revitalize old men”

our society has imagined testosterone being put to public health use from the beginning

Newsweek Sept 25, 1996? ‘ Super-hormone hterapy’ ‘tesosterone’
(Uses same cover as john’s book)

Time Magazine – tesosterone again in Time Magazine

The Early Androgens Market: How testosterone did not become a ‘tonic’

there is no critical distinction

Androgen Ointment for careful dosing (1939)
- testosterone drugs being tested.

[see presentation from September 2006 in Newcastle]

Testosterone for Women: the new era of sex as a lifstyle entitlement

Hormones as ‘antiageing therapy’: the medicalization of the ageing process.

dopers in uniform.
- police officers on steroids
- brain doping by students
Chronicle of Higher Education ‘the other performance-enhancing drugs’(2004, Dec 17.)

Does a lifestyle transform a drug into a stimulant?

“I sincerely believe he didn’t see steroids as a drug, none of these kids do’

Tesosterone magazine
- if there is one, it’s probably a lifestyle, not a drug

NEJM – Aging and foundation-of-0youth hormones, paul m stewart. (Editorial)

new york times 1851

ME: treatment of syllvester stallone’s steroid episode in Australia a stunt?

ME:P If I told you that the Sylvester Stallone steroid story earlier this year was a publicity stunt to promote his film, would that change the way in which you would use it as part of your analysis?

what is medical treatment for?

‘if it gives real happiness, that is the most tha  any sufegon or medicine can giv e Dr Harold Gillies, poionieering British plastic surgeon specializing in the cosmetic repair of burned an maimed soldiers.

line between therapy and enhancement more blurred, but in sports it remains distinct.

outside of sport, enhanceemtn becoming part of acceptable lifestle goals.

Questions and Answers

Barrie: impc of context of supplement use. parallel with alcohol use – not supplement, but ubiquitous except in certain contexts, eg driving. so maintain distinction by defining context in which is seen. Also, bigger problem of maintaining definition of what a drug is – performance enhancement. athletes will not take supplements unless performance enhancing.

John: alcohol comparison important, but works one way but not another. focuses on volume of social harm that arses from use – anti-doping can make some analogies. compare social impact of steroid abuse with alcohol. but does not work in following way: putting police officer on alcohol improves performance, but if look hard enough can reconstruct dialogue of police officers on steroids – legit doping to assist in overpowering physically violent criminals. other trade ofd. chief of police of Miami said: we really should think about whether approp to put police on steroids. he was not saying it was wrong, but should think about it. now is v politically incorrect thing to say. but he identified a real dilemma. more common as something like modafinil becomes acceptable as a productivity stimulant. how are our feelings and values going to deal with this? popular wisdom in us that caffeine runs some industries.

Rob Beamish: enhancement as part of popular culture; postmodernist remaking of self; now, we remake self as part of regular way of lif. but also saw enhancement as violation of ethics. but in high performance sport, not anone who says high performance sport is a character building practice. so, enhancement not violation of ethics, but only certain types. where decide that enhancement is no longer ethical. at what point will we see steroids as non-ethical?

John: in 1990,k WHO said in Lancet that small doses of anabolic steroid were safe. research still being churned out in endocriminology. one part of the dilemma is that still in process of deciding how dangerous the drugs are. we know what anti-doping says. but, these are not the only opinions of relative risks. this remains undecided.

14.00 – 14.30
Prof. Bengt Kayser – Current anti-doping policy: harm induction or harm reduction?

doping-like behaviour

Randall, Zimmerman And Crook
prohibited from Olympic strat

kikkan randall – also natural epo peak

spirit of sport – mal defined concept

ME: deliberately so, like many ethical concepts.

repression vs potential gain

consequences of being caught
- exclusion for life

consequences of a medal
- fame and money for life

difficult to punish much more

does anti-doping work in the sense of their being less doping?
- not clear.

transport of doping drugs easier than cocaine, etc

2006 Blood, false-positive detection of recombinant human ep in urine following strenuous physical exercise
- criticised by different groups.

ME: Should WADA institute policies to protect vulnerable perspectives on anti-doping?

mike: people who disagree with your prognosis will agree with our diagnosis. disagree with ethical analysis, but agree with analysis.

14.30 – 15.00
Coffee break
15.00 – 15.30
Privat-Dozent Dr. Giselher Spitzer – Body and mind – biographical and health studies about doping victims in East German elite sport

15 years shift – what you see in doping procedures today was ‘state of the art’ before 1989

when did it start with steroids?
- blue pill oral-turinabol was 14-15yrs median
- half of sample doped before, first estimated 10 yeraas up to 14

why taking bills?
- no true answer
- others: vitamins, help traiing,  therapy

important damage and disease in sample
-    negative developments
-    damae of skeleton and muscle make normal jobs impossible (eg. longer standing, sitting, holding things). typical decision to find work was to find freelance.
-    no control group, so used brothers and sisters and offspring of each. most of the conditions are not present in these relations.

change of genotype – genetic damage
-    virilisation of foets or mandartory abortion because of pregnancy while training or a half year after competition
-    premature death while pregnancy or death birth (6 of 46 died from premature death); 3 parents have death birth
-    risk of premature death of children of doped athletes 32 times higher than normal popn; risk of death birth 10 times
-    important when considering that athletes were strong and medically well controlled
-    even control group did not have these figures

side effects on children born to athlete sing drugs
-    most of 69 surviving children also damaged
-    children of mothers who ere drugged, typically handicapped
o    37 children 54% suffer from 2 illneses
o    17 ids multiple damage
-    Dsisease represented more than 2 times:
o    every fourth child has allerges
o    one of 4 has skin illness
o    one of 4 asthmatic
o    one of 10 crippled
o    nearly one of ten metaboligc
o    1 of 7 psychic
o    1 of 17 mental disability

change of phenotype

1.    side effects: skin
a.    skin disease 12%
b.    allergies 12%

Liver
-    disease 17%

organsof body
-    damage to skeleton 92%
-    operations 67%
-    knee shoulder ankle joint 22%

25% of doped athletes have cancer or had cancer
35% sudden inflammations
17% migraine
15% metabolic
stomach 15%
epilepsy 10%
kidney 6%

disturbance of psyche and behav
-    attempts to suicide  38%
-    psychic illness 62%
-    health nutrition 25%
-    social drug
-    addiction to alcohol 13%
-    addiction to drugs 6%

side effects on male
-    testicle-atrophy or loss ability to produce sperm, 4 athletes
-    operation of testicles 3 athletes
-    enlarged prostate and treament 1 athlete
-    gynacomeastia 3 athletes (11%) (pre-cancer)
-    8 andrological diseases (29%)
o    more often than was thought

side effects on women
-    virilisation in general (breast reduction, facial hair, lowering of voice) 42%
-    injectins after maenorrhoea 4 women
-    hypertrophy of clitoris (not asked!) 0 in literature biggest size is 12cm
-    atrophy of uterus and underveloped 2 women
-    changes to ovaries – 3 women
-    generally
o    12 women gynaecological disease (50%)
o    probs with sexualidentification and identity, resulting from virilisation

no case of transexualism

7 secondary side effects as a result of higher dosese (‘overload)
- new type of damage of connecting tissue
- 7 athletes took drugs against feeling of being hungry or pills to lose water
- german masters or Olympic medallists or candidates were anxious because some gram of body mass. they stopped after reaching goal

The Value of the Results
- what we learn
first: give help to victims of mandatory oping as a humanistic need
second: knowledge to prevent re-emergence of simlar systems based on drugs eg china
third: enhancement of future policy

ME: Why do we have no good answers about what is happening in China?

other values
- value of health motor for anti doping
- boy capital is concrete guide for athletes who have to decide if they want to dope
- beyond ethical arguments, must protect own health.

Caston Lundby – rHuEPO treatment in humans: new findings and considerations for anti-doping work in the future

function of rHuEPO on blood

red cell mass ncerase, decrease plasma – total amount remains similliar

function of rHuEPO on performance

invasive studies – 6 catheters

new: epo also works at altitude. if take epo and ex at altitude, have use until 4100m approx.

so epo works for max ex intensively, but since most comps not held at max capacity, wanted to know at more suitable ex level. – how long could cycle of 80% of max to exhaustion
-    VO2max inc, but sub maximal intensities, much greater effect of epo doping.
-    not that using epo will lead to 54% increase, but that, in cycling, if break away from pack, could go for same velocity for 54% more time.

does epo have other functions than increasing oxygen content?
-    we’ve found receptor for epo in skeletal muscle (Lundby et al, AJP.
-    we’ve found no other physiological function with our model.
-    if develop more capabilities, could inc ex capacities.

to determine whether other effects,  gave subjects epo.
-    cycling exercise.
o    removed new blood from epo inducaed athletes. result showed presccie correspondence with pre-induced performance
•    suggests that effects of epo on performance related to arterial oxygen content

conclusion 1
-    rHuEPO increase arterial oxygen content by inc red cel mass decaeasing plasma vol
-    if arterial o2 inc aerobic also increase
-    m

is it dangeros to take rHuEPO.

transgenic mouse – tg6 mouse – born with 80 hematocrit. lives for 12 moths. wild type lives 24 months.
-    dies ofmulti-organ failure.

Mean Arterial Blood Pressure -0 in our substances, increased by 5-6ml of mercury – if you have this throughout your life, it is of course hazardous, but if increase to 50 and inc mercury for a few months per year for a cycling career, my guess is that it’s not so bad.

also investigated heart itself. found no dangers.

detection strategies and other

are the detection methods good?
-    abolish hematocrit level? because easily manipulated (plasma expanded, or blame sauna)
-    so, think about quantifying total haemoglobin mass, since this is constant measure usually

Hb increases with altitude exposure
Hb increases with training
Daily variation in htc
daily variation in plasma epo

so, to know whether is stable, measured in subjects – breath carbon monoxide

not clear that rapid increases in htc is blood doping

wide variation

so, this method is worthless

the on/off model

future (now) ?

epo receptor activating peptides (ERAPs)
-    do job of epo, but are not epo

when not neede, broken down immediately by
-    prolyl hydroxylase inhibitors

group in oxford has made inhibitors (DETECT FOR INHIBITOR?)

Machines to use?
-    Radiometer OSM3

Conclusion 2
-    difficult ot get htc or hb mass measure
-    machines don’t always tell the truth
-    future (and this is now…) is scary with regard to detecting endogenous epo enhancing agents

15.30 – 17.00
INHDR network meeting

19.00
Dinner in Aarhus
4
International Network of Humanistic Doping Research
www.doping.au.dk
16 August 2007
8.45 – 9.15
Coffee
9.15 – 9.45
Asst. Prof. Rob Beamish – The Policy Implications of the Current Social Construction of Steroids as a “Moral Panic”

I try to never use the word doping, since implicit illegality

Umah Bartov ‘Distorted Mirrors’
- perceptions are fundamentally important
- holocaust portrayed through series of mirrors

march 17, 2005 – committee on government reform

social constructionism
- moral panics
- claims makers
- build moral consensus

eg. house committee is one process of claims making

coubertin’s objectives have become the IOC brand

1972 munich – separate GDR
- east german successes embarrassment to west

Wade 1972 raises concern about steroids

‘the first of male steroids to improve performance is said to have been in world war II when….

1988 – 48 strides under 9.8 seconds

Trevor Graham turns in syringe with THG to USADA
BALCO
2004 State of the Union

San Francisco chronicle links Greg Anderson to BALCO who is linked to

bigorexia – young men trying to bulk up. – associated with Viagra, and other enhancements – ‘cult of the body’ within a context where drug/supplement use is widespread.

comic book masculinity

use of steroids part of postmodern world of changing faces.

Questions and Answers

John H: how long did victor conte serve in prison for balco – 3 months. grotesque disproportion of moral panic vs judicial system.

Rob: game of shadows – clear that there are thousands of BALCOs throughout America.

Paul D: mythmaking vs actual fact? how distinguish?

9.45 – 10.15
Dag Vidar Hanstad (Norwegian School of Sport Sciences) – Where on Earth was Michael Rasmussen? Elite Level Athletes and their Whereabouts
dag.vidar.hanstad@nih.no

www.sportsanalyse.com

aim
-    survey of athletes attitudes on doping
-    292 subjects, 80 responses (or was it 80?)

findings
-    80% said they trusted the online system
-    1 out of 4 felt it reduces the joy of being an elite athlete
-    signif percentage felt that 3 warnings in 18months should lead to sanction
-    many athletes felt part of a ‘big brother’ system?
-    few felt that info collected would be misused.

does tracking whereabouts violate self-determination?
need to regulate can get out of control

everyday surveillance is extensive

10.15 – 10.45
Asst. Prof. Andy Miah – Human Enhancement Technologies and Sport: The New Language of Doping?
10.45 – 11.00
Coffee break
11.00 – 11.30
Prof. Mike McNamee – Ethical issues regarding human enhancement technologies: Therapy, Enhancement and the traditional goals of medicine in sport

against doping
- performance enhancement
- allows more training – coercion
- unnatural
- harmful
- unfair advantage
- cheating

idea of enhancement
- valorization of autonomy
- are athletes generally autonomous. if not, cannot make autonomous choices
- athletes are not autonomous, do not understand sports medicine, are passive.

ME: their reliance on expert knowledge is no different from your own knowledge of medicine.

medicine is essentially therapeutic

ME: but a wide range of therapies are context driven. imagine a 70 year old man who can no longer enjoy a sex life. is the prescription of Viagra therapy or enhancement? Alternatively, an individual who has a known late onset genetic condition for which there is an ongoing treatment – you are likely to get Parkinson’s, we should start treating you now’ your characterisaton of these as peripheral to your concerns is mistaken. they are the business of all medicine.

doesn’t follow that what happens within a hospital is all therapy

night and day, cannot tell you when one begins. – ME: yes you can mike, it’s when you wake up

‘there will be cases which are not therapy/enhancement, I don’t have a problem with that’
- ME: that’s precisely the problem you have

demarcate unacceptable enhancement
use of prosthetics in elite disability sport

how desirable is the fact that the performance is dependent on technology? (Loland)
prob is surrending level of control athlete has over daily life
-    ME: so, an athlete that wants to stay at home with family, cannot afford to take them to mountain, her quality of life is diminished by not using hypobaric

will what is left be recognisably human?

Questions for Mike:
1.    if your claim is that athletes are passive – ie. not autonomous – then I also doubt my own understanding of . there is no legal basis for supporting the claim that athletes lack autonomy. In 1985, the case of Gillick vs West Norfolk established what’s called ‘Gillick Competence’. it indicated conditions where minors could obtain abortion without requiring parental consent. it has become a critical part of how we think legally about autonomy and consent. there is no way imaginable that you could argue legally that athletes are not autonomous to such an extent that you could step in for them to decide on the basis of some ‘substituted judgement’. Over the last year, my doctor has quadrupled my preventative prescription for asthma. I’m not sure I understand the medical science too well. I feel like I might be building an unhealthy resistance, but there is no doubt that I have autonomously acceded to this treatment.
2.    Medicine makes us well ‘for something’ it is never free from the lifestyles we want to lead.

11.30 – 12.00

Director Michele Verroken – Anabolic Steroid Use – what is the size of the problem for sport and society?

reliability of data = credibility of information

test date from 1993-2003

no of samples increased from 89166 to 151210

no of anabolic steroid findings inc from 940 to 1169 (872+297 – includes beta 2 agonists)

question – is an approx 2% problem, a problem?

in 2002-3, Australia reported only .59% positive test.

we don’t know about the problem

survey of athletes 1998

54% believe that up to 30% of competitors in their sport were using performance enhancing drugs

4% said 60% were doing so

3% (none from weightlifting or rugby league) believed sport was clean

(from the Indenendent)

new york times 2003
‘how many athletes in us use steroids’
results do not reflect testing data?

also asked whether it bothered people – 30-40% said no.

realibility of testing, random, missed test scenarios

many athletes say random testing is actually targeted.

positive test over the years not significant percentage.

ME: ou mention Beijing. what do we know?

are we helping ourselves by identifying the size of the problem.

better to miss a test than fail a test.

more than 70 British athletes have missed at least one out of competition drug test. 4 of them have missed 2.

IAAF regs say a missed test is for five years, not just 18 months.]

testosterone reporting

testosterone-epitestosterone ratio
- upto 2004: 6:1
- post 2004:

Autologous blood injections in soft tissues complaint

alice in wonderland
‘I don’t think they play fairly…’

£2000 to treat abscess from steroid injectors – if teach to inject properly, lower the cost.

future social problems?
- France BJSM research – 1/100 of eleven year olds use drugs to enhance performance (could be salbutamol)

we know there are inconsistencies between sport and society use of steroids

to WADA
- tighten up testing – not government targets
- promote health consequences of using steroids and opportunities of needle exchange.

12.00 – 13.00
Lunch
13.00 – 13.30
Prof. Alessandro Donati – Connections between doping and narcotic drugs

Australian anti-doping agency – image vs performance enhancing drugs

Schwarzenegger was paid by mafia directly for his films

combination of doping and training knowl
- day of athlete now is full of training – cannot do other things.
- e.g. many cannot read more than 10 books a year
- rogge now interested in youth – fight obesity and sedentary – so, youth Olympic games
- no connection between doping and obesity/sedentary.
- clear that athletes use undetectable drugs, not the others
- anti-doping tests died.
- dick pound says they’ve improved, which is true, but prob is that anyone can modify and disguise drugs.
- we need anti-doping, but not only.

source of proof
- in sport – only test
- in judicial system – searches, seizure, wire ttapping, expert reports, test biology, documents

what is hidden behind high number of negative tests?
- suffer from asthma, high testosterne or hmb
- hides anomalous levels – pathologies behind results
- interest in lives or appearance – I think only appearance
egs.
- upward trend of cholestorol levels through t years. why?
- unexplained fluctuations of haematocrit and haemoglobin levels (more than 20%)
- critical fluctuations of liver transaminase..also azotemia, bilirubin and several other parameters

negative anti-doping hides emerging disease conditions.

electronic health passport is a good idea.

why do we need state laws against doping?
-    every country should pass criminal laws against doping or update existing laws concenring addictive and pharmaceutical substances that would allow effiecient action to contrast t diffusion of doping among amateur athletes and in gymnasia.

mistake in Italian law is that specifies for elite athletes, it should be everywhere.

ME: if the law should be for everyone where else do you want to police usage? schools, gymnasia,

sport system is scarely efficient as regards acquistion of proof but decisions on sanctions are taken swiftly, but process much longer

dishonest officials stay in the environment, while athlete is out.

the old ioc was a disaster. now we hope wada, but we are late

connections between doping substances and social drugs

common ground – cocaine, stimulants, amphetamines heroin, opiates narcotics cannabis, ghb, alcohol.

sport system

difficult to accept sport system.
athlete positive for cocaine. he never went to disco. when is he going to use cocaine for social?

antidoping lasws in eujrope

legal systems on dupong
- in June 2006, Italian minister for social affairs appointed me fconsultant

doping substances are assimilated to addictive drugs so that the judicial instruments and the anti drugs criminal las…

se of doping substances not criminal offence for common practiconers but only for professional athletes….because doping gives them an illicit advantage and damages their opponents
- create indiv health smart card for all practioners of sport federation.
- not important to disqualify, but to stop
- inverstigations coordinated by special police squad
- contrast traffic of doping substance via the internet

Article 28, item 4, establishes internet acess providers….

Slovenia
- websites in several countries
-

ME:

13.30 – 14.00
Asst. Prof. Ask Vest Christiansen – The use of anabolic-androgenic steroids among non-competitive strength training athletes – cultural, social, and psychological explanations

campaigns against non-competitive strength trainers has failed, why?
portrait of a person who took a lot of steroids and loved it
presentation of types of questions received by Anti-doping denmark

1999 national household survey on drug abuse – estmate 3m users of steroids in US
ADD estimates between 10,000-60,000 in Denmark
inexactness reveals how little we know
4 of 5 steroid users are non-athletes
in Denmark: 9/10 users non-athletes
steroid users larger doses today than previously reported
widespread misconception that trainin for improving appearance can only succeed with combined drugs and training

have tried to change things by imposing fear

a paradigmatic change – not just a medical prob but a cultural phenonmenon

take into account cultural norms and values of drug inflicted subcultures

campaigns have been based on bourgeious values, v different from cultures of body-builders

focus of campaigns have focused on side effects and consequences – impotence, acne, damage to vital organs.

subjective experience of drugs vary
- inc stength, virtality, libido, social status

a Danish bodybuilder
- said how use of drugs gave 2 fantastic years of building, but ultimately spiralled out of control.
- from compettive football, but disillusioned. realised potential for muscle building. was well proportioned. but after progress, muscle development levelled off. decided to continue development with steroids. began with anabolic, to nanobolic – injecting 150-250 mg per week – more effective and no side effect of subcut fat, as pills did. achieved high recognition in his milieu. strict diet. other things mattered less. when met a girl, made clear should not complain about his use. experienced none of the side effects, never violent. but lost control of medicine. intervals between treatments completely disappeared. did not bother him at first, but became ill. 3 weeks before contest, body broke down. hospitalized. in recovery, realized seriousness, before moving depression. he felt something was taken from him. – injustice that had not been able to finish project. now recovered and teaching in small village school.
- what can be learned?
- male status of muscles is crucial to understanding doping of weight training
- promise of transformation.

Alan Klein ‘little big men’ – promise of change, from vulnerable to heroic and opposing.

14.00 – 14.30
Coffee
14.30 – 15.00

Prof. Verner Møller – Is the current anti-doping strategy satisfactory, and can it be improved?

doping is what wada assesses it to be

prob not that you dope, but how you dope

eg. caffeine – taken off list, despite being a stimulant
why not oppose vanity dopng?

tamburrini – what is wrong with doping?

fact that doping rules are arbitrary does not mean they are mistaken.
second claim by tamburrini, is that open access would be discovery of actual risks.
-    other areas suggest restrictive use leads to

in spite of these reasons, threre is support for anti-doping

so what is wrong with doping? nothing if ultra-liberalistic perspective

Questions and Answers

Claudio: is the reason for so few doping injuries evidence of underground doping research?

15.00 – 15.30
Final discussions
15.30 – 16.00
Epilogue
17.15
Visit and buffet at City Hall

International Performance in Sport Conference (2006, Sept, Newcastle)

International Performance in Sport Conference
Newcastle, Sept 2006.

Muscle Responses to Exercise
Prof Dave Jones

how optimised muscle performance before (training) and during competition? (i.e. by warm up)

muscle size and strength almost synonymous

technological advances in sports surgrery
Mr Lennard Funk
shoulder and upper limb surgeon,  Manchester, UK.

improvements in surgical skills and ability to teamwork better has asdvanced capabilities
-    teamwork with coaches, physios and the conditioning coaches

advancements faster than literature

www.shoulderdoc.co.uk
www.sportsmedclinic.com

not clearly evidence based

how allow person to recover faster?

aim = return to previous level of sport

National League Player of the month
-    Paul Rowley, Centurians –

shoulder
1.    anthroscopy
2.    surface replacement
3.    osteochondral lesions
4.    rotator cf repair and patches
5.    suturtres and anchors
6.    hyaluronans
7.    acceearted rehab – cryo, tc

knee, sanjiv jari
1.    chondrocye transplantation
2.    meniscal transplant
3.    double bundle ACL

Anthroscopy
-    ‘ the needle with an eye
-    no sutres, less pain, day case procedures, quicker rehab, lower morbidity
-    conditions treated: impingement, AC joint artisritics
-    overhead athletes shoulder –
o    internal impingement, dynamic assessment (Burkhart et al, Arthroscopy, 2003) – not just baseball pitchers
o    anterior plication
-    contact athletes shoulder
o    labral lesions
o    treat all associated pathology
o    rapid return (Funk et al. Clin J Sports Med, 2006)
-    Rotator cuff repair and reconstruction
o    cuff tears
o    outcomes of RCR
•    time ti surgery; previous steroid injections, quality of tendon tissue; quality of muscle; smoking and NSAIDs
-    Collagen patches
o    reinforcement of repair; provide protection; incr strength of repair replacement; accelerated healing (growth factors)
o    GraftJacket regenerative tissue matrix
-    Genetic Engineering
o    putting stem cells on collagen scaffold
-    Wheelchair athletes shoulder
o    acute rotator cuff tear
-    Osteochondrail lesions of sholder and elbow
-    Sutres and anchors
o    extremely strong, semi-biodegradable, controlled release growth factors
-    Anthroscopic stack
-    anthroscopic theatre – bridgewater hospital, Manchester
-    shoulder replacement in young people
o    surface replacement (bone preserving, minimally invasive, easier revision, long term results (Funk, Copeland and Levy, JBJS 2004)
-    Post-op advances
o    anti-implamm
•    mechanical, biochemical (inhibit phagocystits)
o    viscoseal hyaluronan (less pain, better function)
-    Slings and Cuffs (traditional slings, unnatural and no evidence!)
o    in France: preferred: 15 deg ER Sling – better early ROM
-    Cryocuf (less pain, less analgesics, faster ecover Singh et al 2001)
-    Shoulder rehab advances
o    protect from physiotherapst!
o    effects of immobilisation
o    clinical results
•    old protocol – 20|%s stiff
o    protect and rehab at same time?
o    Tendon loading
•    immobilisation: dec tendon weight, dec stiffness and tensile strength, irregulat collagen fibres, type 3 :> Type 1 collagen; degenerative changes; Exercise: (incr growth factors, tensile strength, incr
•    EXERCISE RATHER THAN IMMOBILISE
-    Accelerated Protocol
o    Day 1-3 weks (0-20% EMG exerciseds; Low activitiy)
o    3-6 Weeks (40% + EMG)
o    6+ (40% + EMG)

Kneee (Sanjiv Jari)
1.    chondrocyye

Autologous Chondrocyye Implanatation (ACI)
-    cartilege cells harvested and multipled
-    isolated defects, stable knee reqs,

MACI
-

Summary
Future:
Biological Implants
Tissue Engineering

Questions and Answers

question: how does it fit with doping

a: don’t know?

a: growth factor unlikely to enhance

Lee:

Ron: doping do not prevent treatment

Lee: grey area is gene therapy – once therapeutic over, still a permanent enhancement

Michelle Verokken:

Ron: where next big advances?

Funk: not sure ewhether tissue engineering will be taken over by synthetically derived growth factors.

Athletic Injury and Gene Therapy
Lee Sweeney

muscle injury in context muscular dystrophy

skeletal muscle

somatic cell gene transfer
-    delivery of DNA into fully developed tissues (eg lung, liver, heart, skeletal muscles)
-    technology developed for gene therapy – correction of genetic mistakes that cause disease
-    hwr same technology for genetic enhancement or improvement of functionality of non-disesase, but injured tissue

Gene delivery into muscle
-    primary target is post-imtoic (no-dividiing) nuclei of t mature muscle fibres
-    gene delivery vectors
o    naked (plasmid) DNA – ineffecitent and transient
o    Viruses (AAV (Serotypes 6 and 8 are most efficient); Capsule modified lentiviruses
o    Non-viral DNA conjugates
o    Adult stem cells (muscle and bone marrow derived)

AAV mediated gene transfer
-    readily infects skeletal muscle
-    no drop off of expression over time
-    limb delivery possible, body delivery still limited
-    size limitation – some genes don’t fit (duchenne muscular dystrophy)
-    virus production had been a problem, but new technologies in viral production … amount required to treat will soon not be a problem.
-    immune response problem –

Questions and Answers

Question: a lot of body builders using systemic IGF-1 from China

question: will treatments be relevant for diff fibre types?

a: wouldn’t redistribute muscle mass.

Lee: application to dogs – owners would like dogs to be able to keep going for longer.

lunch

biomechanics and sport
salo

definition

support issues
examples

Conflicts of Interest Panel

mark james, acting head of Salford law school
john o’leary
mike townley, parters of athletes1

mark
Dept of Health recognition of Sport and Exercise medicine as a discrete specialism is releavtn here.

ME: ask question about whether should be charcterised as medicine.

discussions of ‘best practice’ more relevant than legal rules that are tight

ME:  we heard earlier that surgical technological developments does not rely on an established evidence base, so can an athlete expect informed consent?

john

what do we mean by implied consent in sport?

mike

need for radical difference in physician’s role in sport performance

ME: Is the patient-doctor model an adequate reflection of the athlete-doctor relationship?

Question: Max Jones (runs Marathons (not the Max Jones of UK Athletics)  in what way should aptient-doctor relationship change just because the athlete becomes so good at her hobby. WADA don’t trust doctors. after 1999 lausanne conference,faq was ‘should medical doping be permitted’. answer was no, because only the IOC could control long term effects of doping.

Mike: how should the relationship change? it needs to be less suspicious. doctors must become less suspicious of performance team. athletes must become less suspicious of conseqs off communication of an injury status. in funded sports, not clear that communication leads to de-selection. get beyond idea that favouritism is what counts. british athletes not happy with waiving competition.

ME: 2 athletes, both get injured, one athlete tends to do better with recovery psychologically than another. on this basis, the doctor recommends the former athlete, but on no scientific basis.

Mike: diff between weekend warrior and elite athlete. athletes want to go to limit. amazed at how medical community have reacted.

Rob Dawson: comments outrageous. patient-doctor relationship is sacrosanct. if correct doctor selected for team, they willl have the right values.

Mike: but when accepting claim that nothing breaks patient-doctor relationship

Ross: GMC – doctors role to protect indiv.

James:

Steve Olivier: research ethics. I don’t think the comments are outrageous at all. things can change. why should a rational adult be allowed to waive confidentiality?

Rob:

Mike: great hostility to that waiving of confidentiality. met with resistance before it gets to the athlete.

James: how does one define relationship between doctor and athlete? eg. a power relationship – doctor is older usually, more formal education, perhaps greater level of sophistication. compared with athletes who are youngerk, less experienced in t ways of life, and, perhaps, possessing lesser degree of sophistication. standard I use to make sense is – lookinjg at perspecxtive of aptient – it’s the REASONABLE athlete standard. defining reasonableness is difficult. how achieve informed consent from this perspective? not as an event disclosure – eg. signing a form = consent – I think, compared to gen medicine, sports practictionaer already has special relationship that there is an ongoing comm., that athletes and doctors are working together. sports produce injury. tf, athletes and doctors will have the regular contact. som, there is a special relationship – not legal term. then, issue of informed consent is easier, as ‘process’ or ‘educational’ consent. PROCESS MODEL.

Michelle Verokken: would be fine if informed consent and confidentiality if all athletes over 18. one of my concerns is youngsters brought rhough sports system, where they learn to trust various people. not consent, but only alternative you have to achieve public funding in order to compete. no genuine capacity to consent. implies doctor has nobody behind them, but we know they are.if try to achieve informed consent, must take sport system as a whole.

James: difference between Consent and Assent – if assent, then different from consenting.

Michelle: difficulty in sports is that getting to top, few people who fund themselves without trappings. ie. not sure there is a consensual relationship anymore.

James: objectify athlete

Max: the athlete? the antidoping codes don’t apply to athletes, but to Athletes – defined as International andnational athletes.  WADA 2004 best practices code – form at end – ‘I agree and had opp to review IAAF anti-doping code). they don’t need consent.
WADA Code not an Agreemnt – if effected by it must sign.  when Dick Pound said antidiopng rules are rules that athletes consent to, he said if they don’t like rules, tough!

john:  concerned about idea of ‘best interests’ in sport. seems to be a nebulous consent that runs riot.. idea of waiving confidentiality falls in that confidentiality? how does this benefit athlete?

ME: if we are propsing a non-medical model, would this change DoH funding?

john: interests of sport, or interest of athletes.

mE: rights of sport, wrong, but protection of a practice is.

Question: as an athlete, you choose to compete and accept rules. eg. agree that netball is a non-contact sport.

Naomi, UK Sport: project on datsa storing of injury data

Mike: IOC philosophy – ‘exhaulting life…’ that’s not the way it’s viewed.

John: are you talking about implics of practie, sport, or criminal law? probably committin criminal act to defraud – money involved? prize money

Michelle: informed consent from eam doctor’s perspective be suspicious of.

Rob: who owns the records?  if change definition of doctor in sport… when a clinent, not same duty of care.

Bruce Hamilton: if genuine consent athlete won’t do it?

Mike: to get informed consent, are you saying

james: ongoing consent. significant practicality – not enough time.

coffee

visualisation techniques

functional equivalence
-    motor iagery and motor preparation are related to same represn stem
-    some differences
o    outcome
o    dual pre-motor system

a good experience is good when you do not recall how you did it

bad ones often bad because consciously controlling what is wrong
-    can recall in fullest detail

Practice makes Permanent

Wednesday

Medical Complicity in doping
John Hoberman

historical imeline

1893: philippe Tissie performs a doping experiment
1933: a german pharmacologist condemns doping
1941: androgens for the ‘male climacteric’
1957: American medical association studies doping
1957: ‘should athletes take ‘pep drugs’?’ (UK)
1957: AMA Denounces Amphetamine Doping
1960: an American sports physician on doping

1969: drugs: a threat to sport (Sports illustrated
1972: physican claims steroids don’t work 1985: west german sports doc condemns ysteria
1988: The Lancet on Physicians an Doping
2005: A South Carolind Doc upplied steroids and GH
006: inteview with Loptha Heinrich (Jan Ullrich)
2005: doc comments on golof and testosterone

1890s, era of high performance sport begins
crude exptl period of stressing human physiology
cyclists become great subjects for testing human limits
Tissier linked with De Coubertin – concerned about stree on body from sport
ie. physician concern about welfare of athlete goes back far

two aspects of tissier –
-    1890s, naïve and is sending cyclists around track with diff liquids, rum, milk, champagne
-    performing a dopping expt of hisoown

before concept of doping existed, he was interested in wht to do about fatigue

he described athlete as a sick person

athlete as a pathological case

when does idea of doping emerge

1920s

1933, A German Pharmacologist Conmens Athletic Doping
- check Mortal engines for quote

UV rays to boost performance

inter-war period, doping discussion as we know it begins

don’t tell me that steroids spoil everything!

marketing of androgens

1941 – Androgens for the ‘Male Climacteric’
healing of male menopause

testosterone synthesisee in 3 labs in 1935

by 1939 being used wrecklessly by US docs

aphrodisiac property of testosterone
-    irony, was given to women who were in no condition to be sexually active

the focus on athletic doping is imp, btut not enough
need to look at the entire medical landscape

booming anti-ageing market

1957
Four Minute Miles accused of Amphetamine Doping, New York Times, June 6
‘AMA to Study drugs in Sports: Use in Four-Minute Mile Hinted’
[front page story]
-    assumption by phywsician was that humans not capable of this without supplementation

this set off a discussion

1957
The New York Chapter fo the AMA Denouncest Doping as a Threat to Youtyh – JAMA, June 13: 1244)

ME: What is the motivation of these doctors?

we are still at this stage of the discussion

1957
Sir Adolphe Abrahams on Amphetamine Doping, The Sunday Times June 16 ‘should athletes take ‘pep’ drugs’?

he did not succumbe to the moralising syndrome of the previous eg

need to understand how naïve some physiscians have been about doping before

a victorian outrage in response of AMA officials

this is also recognisable to use, as their genuione alarm of illegitimate use of drugs, what we get is something that is conflation of moral/ethical argument against drug use and the medical argument

ethics and health underpinned anti-doping

conflation of moral and medical is effortless

for Abrahams and brother who were publishing commentaries at the time, Abrahamas was an indep type. refused to assume drugs were effective. he also said ‘quite apart from the possibility of physical illconsequences, physician cocenr about amphatem…. was about suppressing self-inhibiting;’’’ concrn that would suppress limit recognition
‘as to anything unsporting’… o’one is forced to face debatable’
-    ie. he did not take automatic moralising position. he insists on thinking about what constitutes doping. this was a sophisticated posn for his day.

imp to understand that this issue was being given attention 50 yrs ago

what constitutes doping was unsettled

groping for a workablre doping definition

why?;

partly because assaled by claims about drug use
and by medical concern

1960
An American Sportw Phyiscian on dopin: Amateur vs Professionals, New York Times, sept 12,
‘use of drugs in sport’
first drug induced Olympic athlete death

letter to NYT where immediate parst president of American Coll of Spots Med says
‘the proesional athlete has a job to do, which may be his sole livelihood’ ‘sounds like prince de merode] so he ‘may use any means to acxhieve’
calculated risk of means are recog part of any professional sport

who could describe subculture of toure de france any better!?

using words likke ‘perversion’

he was saying let them do what they want

1969
Sports Illuswtrated: ‘drugs – a threat to sport’
sports Ill, June 23

HK Duley – physician on US team
-    offered 4 args on behalf of physican involvement in steroid doping
o    1. indespensible in weight sports
o    2. physician had no obligatin to dissuade athletes from using drugs ‘I did not give steroids at Taho, but I did not inquire what the boys were doing on their own. I did not want to be forced into a position where I had to report them’
o    3. drugs did not differe in any essential way to other performance enhancing techniques. if I know something that would improve performance, without any serious health risk, I see no reason not to make available to an athlete.
o    4. medicasl supervsision was safer than no supervision at all ‘lesser harm’ argument. ‘athletes hear about these things arnd are going to get them one way or anyohter’

have to agree with hum on one point
-    in 1960s etc were many physicians who did not know about these drugs.

1972
An American sports physician claims that etoids don’t work: doping is quackery, JAMA, vol221 August 28, 1972
‘Drugs and the Athlete’ (Donald L Cooper), pp.1007
‘normal is the best there is’
‘ drugs are for losers’

this phase cost sports physicians credibility

1985
West German sports doc (Mortal engines, 1992, p.262)
condemns hysteroa about therapeutic anabolic steroid use: Heinz Liesen

1976
most prominent german sports physicans testified that steroids were safe and recommended should be used by national athletes

Heinz Liesen (1985) – testosterone less dangerous than female pill
‘why do we make such a drama out of this?’
-    this question keeps returning
-    if we want to get at deep roots of crisis or, more strongly, freefall, mst see how commercial interests in sport, negotiate performance enhancing treaty with war on drugs

West gErman only place I know that had celebrity sports physicians

Lieson has something interesting to say – substitution therapy

therapy vs enhancement problem

1988
The Lancet on Sports Physicians and Doping, Sept 10: 612
two weeks before ben Johnson
‘Sports Medicnie – is there lack of control?’
-    ‘although evidence of involvement of med practitioners…is lacking..they are connivers…’

a real problem brewing with doctors involvement

2006-2006
‘James Shortt’
-    ‘an alternative medicine and longevity doctor provides doping drugs to professional football players in Southc Carolina’ (
-    he has just been sentenced to prison for prescribing GH
-    he is a ‘rogue sports physician’ n
-    not with an official position
-    from Jan 01 to Jun 04, authorised around 139 GH prescriptions, etc etc,
-    comparative context imp
-    market for anabolic steroids has v little to do with elite athletes! (there is a range of clients).
-    prescribed to athletes, police officers (thisis imp)
-    mesamorphists.com
-    cops, soliders, bouncers, security, fireman, all use them
-    he take recordedhis own incriminating conversations
-    he says ‘for you guys what I’m looking for is a non-detectable performance enhancement’
-    athlete as client – what does a sport physician owe an athlete?
-    My guess is that Dr Shorrt is looking for stress from a functional standpointm, rather than therapeutic
-    treated about 14 NFL to help athletes ‘heal’ from athletes
-    but he just said the opposite!
-    medical authorities did not look at Shortt as he saw himself. they blamed him – no medical justification for prescriptio
-    he then collapses and confesses, saying he wrote prescriptions and he says he knows it was ‘federally wrong’
-    he failed his social obligation to create role models

mE: I’m inteeresrted in the range of characters you present.

Dr Lothar Heinrich
-    ‘anti doping work is not my mission’
-    focused on health

ME: why does heinrich not see antidoping work as health work?

-    when Ullrich and other 57 got wiped out of Tour, tv viewings went down by a third
-    ‘cycling is not a drug-ridden sport’
-    in sport ‘you hope to participate in something of historic significance’

so much for the detacthment of sports physicians

Questions and Answers

Rob: crucial aspect is that is ‘sports entertainment’ industry

ME: comparable to others?

Rob: bottom line is that it is against the rules. and this is the key Partl.l the future?

John: public survey data suggest around 30-40% say they are unconcerned about medically supervised steroid use. we’ve reached a point when have to think about being a conscientious defector from performance culture of sport.  Heinrich doesn’t want to take any social responsibility.

Michelle: where is best pase to have debate about medeicl involvement on performance enhancement

lunch

prof. david cowan, UK Sport
kings college London

DTI Foresight
-    ‘analysis of substance that influence performance’
-    he was involved with this.
-
-    landmarks in drug analysis

pharmacogenomics
microchip technology

post 2010
-    inviv in situ analysis
-    electromagnetic scanning
-    direct measurement in complex matrizes
-    isotope signatures

would we have sport where everybody wins? no.

as long as it is the will of sport comptitors to control doping, effective doping control must be continued

bruce

Garnier ‘medscape ortopediat and sports med 2006 ‘in sport with are dealing with  a health even a super-healthy population

Medication Use in Athletes Selectf for Doping Control at t Sydney Olympcis 2000
Caorrigan and Kazlauskas CJSM 2003
‘it is diffi to udst why t med starff has endorsed such under dosing as apriri one a day…

autologous blood injections

blood spinning
-    spin off from autologous blood injections

jim

baseball
need consent of union in order to do doping tests