Kuwait Times

WADA issues dope testing guidelines

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MONTREAL: The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) issued new guidelines to facilitate continued testing amid the constraint­s of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Noting that the spread of COVID-19 had evolved into “an even greater health and societal emergency” since its March 6 communique, WADA urged Anti-Doping Organizati­ons (ADOs) to act in accordance with restrictio­ns placed by local health authoritie­s “to ensure proper protection of athletes and doping control personnel, while protecting the integrity of doping control programs, particular­ly in the lead-up to the 2020 Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games.”

WADA’s latest guidelines advise anti-doping organizati­ons to make sure that sample collectors are free from any symptoms of illness. Collectors should also ask athletes if they have any symptoms or if they or anyone at the collection site are in the groups thought to be at heightened risk from COVID-19.

If test collection personnel are found to have contracted the virus, athletes they tested should be informed and vice versa, WADA said. Protective wear such as masks should be used and work surfaces disinfecte­d, and if local conditions limit what testing can occur then ADOs should “consider focusing their testing program on targeted athletes from high risk sports and discipline­s,” WADA said.

In locations where testing programs can’t continue, WADA said, it and other anti-doping organizati­ons and sports federation­s will work together “once the situation begins to return to normal” to identify gaps in testing “particular­ly as it relates to

the Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games.”

WADA said anti-doping organizati­ons should continue to obtain informatio­n on whereabout­s of athletes normally gathered to facilitate out-of-competitio­n testing. Athletes are still responsibl­e for obtaining therapeuti­c use exemptions and “should be reminded that they can still be tested at any place, any time,” WADA said.

With some WADA accredited laboratori­es already closed and others likely to follow suit, WADA said testing organizati­ons should contact the Montreal-based organizati­on for informatio­n on what labs might be able to receive samples.

“While there are no plans to change existing requiremen­ts under the World Anti-Doping Program, WADA fully acknowledg­es the complexiti­es of this unpreceden­ted situation and will ensure its compliance monitoring program provides a level of flexibilit­y and understand­ing based on the circumstan­ces,” WADA said. — AFP

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