Vancouver Sun

Doctors warn young athletes about extreme diet tricks

Rubber suits, steam baths, diet pills, nutritiona­l supplement­s and diuretics pose serious risks for teenagers

- BY LINDSEY TANNER

CHICAGO — Young athletes a re a t r i s k o f e n ga g i n g i n unhealthy efforts to lose or gain weight and doctors need to give them guidance and “ put pressure” on coaches to do the same, the American Academy of Pediatrics says.

In a detailed policy statement, the academy stresses that losing or gaining more than roughly one or two pounds weekly is dangerous.

“Weight loss accompanie­d by overexerci­sing, using rubber suits, steam baths, or saunas” should be prohibited for all young athletes, the policy says. So should diet pills, nutritiona­l supplement­s and diuretics, and no weight- loss plan for athletic purposes should ever be used before the ninth grade, the policy says.

The new stance was prompted partly by the 1998 deaths of three college wrestlers using strenuous workouts to lose weight and upcoming weight control requiremen­ts for student athletes from the National Federation of State High School Associatio­ns.

It applies to youngsters in sports where leanness or strength is emphasized, including bodybuildi­ng, gymnastics, figure skating, football and cheerleadi­ng.

These are sports in which coaches may encourage unhealthy weight management practices that can lead to problems including eating disorders, dehydratio­n, heat stress and gaining too much fat instead of muscle, which can lead to cardiovasc­ular problems, the policy authors said.

Doctors need to “put pressure on coaches to do it right,” said Dr. Thomas Martin, lead author of the academy’s policy and a sports m e d i c i n e s p e c i a l i s t i n Williamspo­rt, Pa.

Wrestlers are especially prone to trying dangerous weight-loss methods because they’re often encouraged to compete in the lowest possible weight class. That gives heftier youngsters who lose weight an advantage over more naturally slight competitor­s who truly belong in the lowest weight classes, said Jon Almquist, chairman of the National Athletic Trainers Associatio­n’s secondary schools committee and an athletic training specialist for schools in Fairfax County, Va.

He called the policy an important step to raise doctors’ awareness.

The policy is published in December’s Pediatrics, for release Monday. It updates the academy’s 1996 policy on promoting healthy weight control practices in young athletes.

The problem is “ multifacto­rial,” said Dr. Eric Small, chairman of the academy’s council on sports medicine and fitness and a sports medicine specialist at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York.

“ There’s a coaching involvemen­t, there’s a parental involvemen­t, there’s a societal involvemen­t to be the best at all costs ... putting the child at risk,” Small said.

The policy’s guidelines for allowable weekly weight gain and loss parallel requiremen­ts for wrestlers from the National Federation of State High School Associatio­ns that take effect in the 2006- 07 school year, Almquist said. Those requiremen­ts include mandating body- fat minimums of seven per cent for boys and 12 per cent for girls, he said.

The academy has a similar body fat percentage recommenda­tion for high school boy athletes but does not specify a minimum for girls, saying that they should consume enough calories to avoid menstrual abnormalit­ies that can occur with too much loss. Associated Press

 ?? GREG BAKER/ ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Young boys watch a fellow gymnast perform on the parallel bars in the gymnastics hall at the Shichahai sports school in Beijing. The banner behind urges them to concentrat­e on technique, posture, ability and avoiding injury. Gymnastics is one of the...
GREG BAKER/ ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Young boys watch a fellow gymnast perform on the parallel bars in the gymnastics hall at the Shichahai sports school in Beijing. The banner behind urges them to concentrat­e on technique, posture, ability and avoiding injury. Gymnastics is one of the...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada