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Perceived incidence of drug use in Australian sport: A survey of athletes and coaches
journal contribution
posted on 2018-07-18, 00:00 authored by Stephen MostonStephen Moston, ET Engelberg, J SkinnerDoping control statistics suggest that only 1–2% of athletes are doping. However, studies of the perceived incidence of doping suggest that athletes believe that doping may be far more prevalent. Perceptions may potentially be of greater significance than actual incidence: athletes who believe that other athletes are doping may be more likely to engage in such practices, potentially creating a damaging self-fulfilling prophecy.
This study investigated the perceptions of 609 Australian elite athletes and coaches about the extent of doping in sport. Data were collected via a self-completed survey. Results showed that the perceived incidence of performance-enhancing drug use was approximately 19% (30% for perceived incidence of recreational drug use). Findings are discussed in relation to how perceptions might influence athletes through the
creation of damaging self-fulfilling prophecies, and how sporting associations have attempted to control testing procedures to influence perceptions of drug use in sport.
History
Volume
18Issue
1Start Page
91End Page
105Number of Pages
15eISSN
1743-0445ISSN
1743-0437Publisher
Routledge, UKPublisher DOI
Full Text URL
Peer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- No
External Author Affiliations
University of Canberra; Griffith Business School; Loughborough University, UKEra Eligible
- Yes