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THE PERSONAL PATHWAY TO DOPING The concept of ‘Individual Risk’ and its implications to sport Amanda Batt, Education Manager OBJECTIVES OF THE SESSION • To share and debate the view that ‘doping’ is more than a sport-specific problem • To propose ‘doping as an individual risk’ as a concept • To discuss integration of traditional risk based models to a model that has ‘humans’ at the centre 2 Progress to date CORE INFLUENCERS Wider societal influences Role models Coaches UKAD/NGBs Influencers Parents Health professionals Teachers Coaches Peers UKAD/NGBs Peers Beginner 4 Parents Role models Teachers Health professionals Gifted and talented Performance development Performance Athlete stages High performance Elite Progress to date ATHLETES AS PEOPLE • This is the starting point...as phenomenal as they are • What do we know about people? • Acceptance that doping is a ‘behaviour’ Negative behaviour 6 D O P I N G Covert behaviour SO, WHAT DO WE KNOW Human Nature Sociology 7 Psychology Athlete development Performance RESEARCH • Undertaking by Professor Mike McNamee and Dr Andrew Bloodworth, University of Swansea 2009 Longitudinal study of attitudes to doping 2012 Doping as an individual risk 2011 Redefined phase 5 of study Anticipating Doping behaviours: A review of literature and its implications 8 MAIN CONCLUSIONS • Doping is a behaviour where a doping decision is preceded by instability, a problem • Common tipping points include: • Career instability, peer pressure, relax from stress, injury before major event, performance plateau, personal distress outside of sport, physiological weaknesses, finance, end of career etc. • Wider attitudes: • Social drugs, adolescent peer groups, family support, early specialisation, sympathy with dopers, supplement use, attitudes of significant others, win at all costs, lack of lifestyle/balance, perception of use • Personality, culture and society • Sport specify and in-depth interventions are required 9 POI = Point of Intervention POI OPTIONS Ease , availability, detection, cost/benefit, anticipated regret POI POI PROBLEM POI ACTION •Injury •Transition •Finance (maintain, prospect of) •Change in training •Change in results •Career instability •Family problems •Stress •Fear of failure •Pressure – Individual, societal, peer POSITIVE SELFJUSTIFICATION external influence eg reinforcement POI NEGATIVE INFLUENCE LIFESTYLE POSITIVE (ACTUAL OR PERCEIVED) REINFORCEMENT INFLUENCERS POI •Lack of balance in life •Limited nutritional knowledge •Previous lifestyle behaviours (social drugs, alcohol) DABBLE POI DECISION TIPPING POINT SPORT •Early sport experience (high competition) •Sport norms •Sport culture (professional, profile, sponsorship) •Closed sporting environment •Low regard for health (play on mentality) •Supplement use POI INTENTION •Family (upbringing) •Relationship with Parents •Peers and peer norms •Social norms Active/Passive QUESTIONS SOCIAL SUPPLEMENT USE POI STOP BEHAVIOUR •Personality (risk taking) •Attitudes •Beliefs (detection) •Values •Morals •Attribution (internal/external) •Low self-esteem •High trait anxiety •Personal distress •Motivation (internal/external) •Low resilience/coping skills DECISION HABIT ATTITUDES VALUES BELIEFS EXPERIENCE PERSONAL DOPING 2 YEARS DISCUSSION LIFESTYLE •Lack of balance in life •Limited nutritional knowledge •Previous lifestyle behaviours (social drugs, alcohol) DABBLE POSITIVE EXPERIENCE PROBLEM •Injury •Transition •Finance (maintain, prospect of) •Change in training •Change in results •Career instability •Family problems •Stress •Fear of failure •Pressure – Individual, societal, peer Ease , availability, detection, cost/benefit, anticipated regret ACTION OPTIONS NEGATIVE STOP SELFJUSTIFICATION external influence eg reinforcement BEHAVIOUR DECISION INFLUENCERS HABIT POSITIVE (ACTUAL OR PERCEIVED) REINFORCEMENT INFLUENCE SPORT •Early sport experience (high competition) •Sport norms •Sport culture (professional, profile, sponsorship) •Closed sporting environment •Low regard for health (play on mentality) •Supplement use SUPPLEMENT USE Active/Passive TIPPING POINT SOCIAL •Family (upbringing) •Relationship with Parents •Peers and peer norms •Social norms DECISION INTENTION •Personality (risk taking) •Attitudes •Beliefs (detection) •Values •Morals •Attribution (internal/external) •Low self-esteem •High trait anxiety •Personal distress •Motivation (internal/external) •Low resilience/coping skills ATTITUDES VALUES BELIEFS QUESTIONS PERSONAL DOPING 2 YEARS RISK-BASED APPROACH Systematic risk analysis, tools and tactics Accountability 12 Knowledge and information management Riskbased approach Social process, behaviour and culture Higher risk Medium risk Low risk 1:1 interventions, professional support Education, engagement, effective decision making, deterrent tactics Information and awareness Reinforcement of main messages Empower use of tools e.g Global DRO FINAL THOUGHTS • Athletes are people first, athletes second and people Have a relationship with risk • Doping is a ‘risky behaviour’.... ....an individual risk • We need ‘people’ at the heart of our evidenced based risk assessment • 14