Olympic Doping, Transparency, and the Therapeutic Exemption Process

Olympic Doping, Transparency, and the Therapeutic Exemption Process / Luke Cox, Andrew Bloodworth, Michael McNamee. - (Diagoras 1 (2017) 31 October; p. 55-74)



Abstract:

Within anti-doping policy, the Therapeutic Use Exemption policy enables athletes with a range of medical conditions to compete within elite sport even after receiving prohibited medication substances or methods. It has been claimed, however, that the policy is being misused as a means to enhancing performance in healthy athletes, or athletes who do not suffer from a relevant pathological condition. To counter misuse of TUEs, it has claimed that the data captured in the TUE process should be transparent, even though this would reveal medical information concerning the athlete that would normally be thought of as private. There are further concerns regarding the sharing of medical data within sports organisations, between medical professionals and performance directors or coaches. We critically explore the TUE process, and argue against proposals for a transparent TUE policy on grounds of privacy and concerns for athlete welfare .We conclude that the notion of sports integrity, the threat of doping, and the extension of anti-doping policy, need to be considered within a broader context that also concerns the goals of sports medicine and athlete welfare.

Original document

Parameters

Science
Review
Date
31 October 2017
People
Bloodworth, Andrew
Cox, Luke
McNamee, Michael John
Country
United Kingdom
Language
English
Legal Terms
Anti-Doping policy
Other organisations
Swansea University
Medical terms
Therapeutic Use Exemption (TUE)
Document category
Scientific article
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Pdf file
Date generated
4 May 2021
Date of last modification
28 May 2021
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