The picture above illustrates the front line in combating doping in sport. It is not a new compound of blood booster, but a visual depiction of the Internet.
For the last ten years, anyone who wants to purchase performance enhancing drugs (PED), can. Online pharmacies offer medications without a prescription or a doctor’s review. The safety net of trained doctor, diagnosing and prescribing; with a pharmacist controlling supply and medication levels -are gone -with a click.
More than 2 million people in the UK alone regularly buy prescription drugs. In the USA the figure is thought to be closer to 30 million. With such volumes of drugs delivered by mail, healthy athletes taking delivers of PEDs will generally go unnoticed.
The latent dangers of this practice are massive. Two amateur cyclists in the USA were caught this week for cheating by purchasing erythropoietin (EPO) and insulin growth factor (IGF-1) online. Charles ‘Chuck’ Coyle and Neal Schubel both received 2 year sanctions and destroyed reputations. The number of amateur cyclists in their 30’s and 40’s willing to risk their health for a local victory is staggering, highlighting the fact that this practice is occurring outside of, and potentially inspired by the actions of some selfish professional cyclists.
A study in the US by the FDA, concluded that their research had found only 340 Internet pharmacies as legitimate and identified over 47,000 “rogue” Internet pharmacies. The Royal Pharmaceutical Society (RPS) in England stated that up to 50% of all drugs seized which they tested, prove to be counterfeit. The contents of the pills purchased on line could be lethal. With no safeguard to the producers, mostly in India and China, an athlete’s reaction to the unknown cocktail, is a toxic risk not worth taking.
An athlete taking a performance-enhancing drug, under the supervision of a rogue doctor, is protected somewhat, by a level of knowledge into medical practice and techniques. An athlete self administering, an unproven drug with indefinite amounts of ingredients could be deadly. This danger is most real among young, impressionable athletes.
“The internet presents a real danger to people’s health,” said David Pruce, the RPS director of practice and quality improvement. “Dishonest traders are selling medicines online without any professional qualifications or healthcare expertise. The products they sell can be poor quality at best and dangerous at worst.”
Last year the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Authority (MHRA), seized £5.8m worth of drugs of which it estimates around half have been counterfeit, of those tested 10 percent contained life threatening compounds.
“Oh, I just bought mine on the internet“, was the reply to a question of sourcing PEDs, we recently asked an ex professional cyclist, who has now admitted doping in his career, (although he was never caught). We were able to find a supplier of second generation EPO (Aranesp) in only a few minutes online. Administering this drug without supervision, altering the viscosity of the blood’s hematocrit is simply Russian Roulette.
The risks do out way the gains. Bike with honour, self-respect and pride. Bike Pure










































Comments
NJ 27.11.2010 at 09:00pm
To succeed at sport you require talent, determination and hard effort. The result is a champion, regardless if they win or lose. Add drugs tot he mixture, and all is polluted.
53 11 26.11.2010 at 04:12pm
Chuck stole 2 races from me in 2008. Life ban for soiling our sport
Craig 26.11.2010 at 03:56pm
I wonder did Albertos butcher order vigra by mistake ? As he has made a cock of it!
Dean G. 26.11.2010 at 02:53pm
Imagine it would be impossible to check all the sources of fake or illegal drugs. Education to the dangers of the dope is a important step.
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