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Doping is public health issue, says WADA

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TOKYO: Doping in sport is a public health issue, the head of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) said Wednesday, because of the spread of substance abuse from elite athletes to school gyms.

“Too many people are taking too many substances they don’t even know,” WADA director general David Howman said in an interview in Tokyo.

“Where have they come from? They are not sanitized, they could be very dangerous.”

Howman was speaking days after cycling cheat Lance Armstrong said he would take banned substances again if faced with the same circumstan­ces that saw him dope in 1995.

“If I was racing in 2015, no, I wouldn’t do it again because I don’t think you have to,” Armstrong told the BBC.

“If you take me back to 1995, when doping was completely pervasive, I would probably do it again.”

Howman was in Tokyo for a conference involving sports bodies and the pharmaceut­ical industry on how to stamp out drug cheating. He said young people were doping.

“Sometimes children — and I’m not suggesting Japanese children but I certainly know in North America — have taken drugs that their parents don’t know they’re taking,” he said. While WADA has been trying to address the issue, “it’s not our job because sometimes it’s not elite athletes,” he said.

“As a society we would be shocked at the amount of stuff that our children are taking.

“We think this is a public health issue and we are supported by the World Health Organizati­on and by many others who now see it’s not just a sport issue.”

A string of doping scandals came to light in Russia after a 60-minute documentar­y “Secret Doping Dossier: How Russia produces its Winners” was aired last month by German state broadcaste­r ADR.

WADA set up an independen­t team to investigat­e the allegation­s, but the probe could take months, Howman said.

“We know that it’s not just athletes who are the cheaters; we know that they can be coaches and trainers and lawyers and doctors and physiother­apists, a lot of people,” he said.

“We’ve been saying it’s not just the athlete that’s the cheat. It’s the entourage,” he said.

 ??  ?? HEALTH ISSUE: World Anti-Doping Agency director general David Howman attends a press conference in the second Internatio­nal conference on the Pharmaceut­ical Industry and the Fight Against Doping in Tokyo on Wednesday. (AFP)
HEALTH ISSUE: World Anti-Doping Agency director general David Howman attends a press conference in the second Internatio­nal conference on the Pharmaceut­ical Industry and the Fight Against Doping in Tokyo on Wednesday. (AFP)

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