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Doping Use among Tertiary Education Students in Six Developed Countries
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Risk Factors
Doping Use among Tertiary Education Students in Six Developed Countries
Fotios C Papadopoulos1, 2, Ilias Skalkidis1, Jari Parkkari3, Eleni Petridou1, 4 and “Sports Injuries” European Union Group
| (1) |
Department of Hygiene and Epidemiology, Athens University Medical School, 75 Mikras Asias str., Goudi, Athens, 115-27, Greece |
| (2) |
Department of Neuroscience, Psychiatry, Uppsala University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden |
| (3) |
Medical School, University of Tampere, Tampere, Finland |
| (4) |
Department of Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, USA |
Revised: 08 February 2006
Abstract Data on doping among young non-professional athletes are scarce. In order to estimate the prevalence and predictors of doping
use, a standardized, anonymous questionnaire was self-administered by 2650 tertiary education students from five European
Union countries (Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Italy) and Israel. The reported usage rate of a doping agent (at least
once) was 2.6%, with no significant variation in the frequency of doping reporting among the participating countries. Doping
was, however, less common among students of biomedical schools (OR: 0.49, 95% CI: 0.27–0.89) and was higher among males (OR:
2.16, 95% CI: 1.25–3.74). Students, who use to drink coffee or recall frequent occasions of involvement in drunkenness episodes,
were more likely (twice and three times, respectively) to report doping, and students using nutritional supplements or having
participated in a major athletic event were more likely (four times and twice, respectively) to report doping in comparison
with students who do not. Of note is the high odds ratio for reporting individual doping when having a friend who uses doping
(OR: 8.61, 95% CI: 4.49–16.53). Given the large size of the physically active young individuals in the population and the
small number of professional athletes, doping in the general population may be, in absolute terms, as sizeable problem as
it is among the professional athletes. There was evidence that high-risk behaviour and supplement use increased the risk of
doping.
Keywords Amateur athletes - Behaviour - Doping - Drugs - Physical activity - Young adults
Sports Injuries European Union Group: Gofin Rosa MD, MPH, Shira Shefi MD, School of Public Health and Community Medicine,
Hebrew University and Hadassah, Jerusalem, Israel; Henke Thomas and Schulz David, Chair of Sports Medicine, Ruhr-University
Bochum, Germany; Marchi G. Alberto, IRCCS Burlo Garofolo, Trieste, Italy; Nectoux Marc, PSYTEL, France; Esko Ruotsalainen,
MSc, University of Tampere, Medical School, Finland; Polychronopoulos Evangelos, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor of Preventive
Medicine and Nutrition, Harokopio University, Athens, Greece; Fachadidou-Tsiligiroglou Anna, Professor of Hygiene Nutrition
Dept of Physical Education and Sports, Aristoteleio University of Thessaloniki, Greece
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