Perceived incidence of drug use in Australian sport: A survey of public opinion
journal contribution
posted on 2018-11-27, 00:00authored byStephen Moston, J Skinner, T Engelberg
In the last few years, a large number of cases have come to light in which celebrated
individuals, and even whole teams, have been found to have used either banned
performance enhancing or ‘recreational’ drugs. There are two very different
perspectives on this issue. On the one hand, some see the use of banned drugs as a
threat to sport, whereas on the other hand, the use of performance enhancing drugs is
actually lauded as a way of energizing flagging public interest in sport. This study is the
first survey of Australian popular opinion on the incidence and seriousness of drug
use in sport. Data were collected via telephone interviews featuring a nationally
representative sample of 2520 participants. Results showed that the public believe that
a quarter of athletes use banned performance-enhancing drugs, and a third use banned
recreational drugs. The sport most commonly identified as one where performanceenhancing
drug use is common was athletics (Australian Football League for
recreational drugs). The public were strongly opposed to all forms of drug use in sport,
yet opinion was divided as to whether anti-doping investigations should be handled by
the police. Results are discussed in light of the efforts of anti-doping agencies to
enforce rules and procedures that the public may not fully comprehend.