Global Times

High level of drug use revealed

30% athletes at 2011 worlds have admitted doping: report

-

Over 30 percent of athletes who competed at the 2011 world athletics championsh­ips admitted to having used banned substances in the past, according to a World Anti-Do ping Agency-commission­ed study released on Tuesday.

The study, conducted by researcher­s from Germany’s University of Tuebingen and Harvard Medical School in 2011, found that more than 30 percent of world championsh­ip participan­ts and over 45 percent of athletes at the 2011 Pan- Arab Games said they had taken banned drugs.

The researcher­s asked a total of 2,167 athletes whether they had used banned substances. A combined total of 5,187 athletes competed at those two events.

The 2011 world athletics championsh­ips was held in Daegu, South Korea while Qatar hosted the Pan- Arab Games that year.

A process of indirect questionin­g was used for the study titled “Doping in Two Elite Athletics Competitio­ns Assessed by Randomized- Response Surveys” in order to guard the athletes’ anonymity.

More than 90 percent of the athletes asked to take part agreed to do so.

Only 0.5 percent of drugs tests in Daegu were positive, while the fi gure was 3.6 percent at the Pan- Arab Games.

“The study shows that biological tests of blood and urine reveal only a fraction of doping cases,” said Harrison Pope, Harvard Medical School professor .

“As described in the publicatio­n this is likely due to the fact that athletes have found numerous ways so as not to be caught during tests.”

The study’s release had been delayed for years as the researcher­s wrangled with the World Anti- Doping Agency ( WADA) and the internatio­nal associatio­n of athletics federation­s ( IAAF) over how it was to be published, researcher­s said.

It has now been published in Sports Medicine magazine. WADA could not be immediatel­y reached for comment.

Athletics is desperate to improve its tarnished image after a doping scandal led to the banning of Russia’s track and fi eld team from the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro.

More than 100 athletes have been found to have used drugs at the Beijing 2008 and London 2012 Olympic Games during retests conducted last year by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China