Kuwait Times

UFC revises drugs policy over contaminat­ed supplement­s

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NEW YORK: The UFC and US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) announced changes to the mixed martial arts organisati­on’s drugs policy on Monday to address concerns over cases involving contaminat­ed supplement­s.

The changes aim to differenti­ate between “intentiona­l cheaters” and athletes who “innocently test positive”. The revisions will affect athletes who ingest banned substances from sources like contaminat­ed meat, medication and nutritiona­l products and define ‘certified supplement­s’.

The new policy outlines concentrat­ion levels for substances that are regular contaminan­ts and do not improve performanc­e through the introducti­on of a “UFC prohibited list”.

Athletes who test positive for those substances below a specific threshold and who have not exhibited other signs of doping will not be sanctioned under the new rules.

“For several years, we have pushed for change to ensure that athletes can trust the food, medication­s, and supplement­s they use without fear of being treated like intentiona­l, hard core cheaters,” USADA CEO Travis Tygart said in a statement.

“We expect these changes to go a long way in allowing this to happen and to show athletes who compete clean that their decisions will be supported and validated.”

Jeff Novitzky, the UFC’s vice president of athlete health and performanc­e, cited the “pervasiven­ess of low level contaminat­es” as well as “increased levels of testing sensitivit­y” as factors in changing the guidelines.

“(There’s) an explicit need for decision concentrat­ion levels to ensure the program is penalizing intentiona­l cheaters and not those athletes who have been faithfully adhering to the anti-doping policy,” Novitzky said in a statement.

USADA first developed an independen­t anti-doping programme for the Ultimate Fighting Championsh­ip in 2015 after criticisin­g UFC for administer­ing its own athlete testing without involving the national antidoping group or the World AntiDoping Agency.

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