scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Author

Jake Shelley

Bio: Jake Shelley is an academic researcher from Kingston University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Testosterone (patch) & Athletes. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 4 publications receiving 4 citations.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the human impact of doping and anti-doping on clean athletes in the sport of athletics, and found that clean athletes suffer negative consequences from both doping and drug-using.
Abstract: Background: Doping has been a prominent issue for the sport of athletics in recent years. The endurance disciplines, which currently account for 56% of the global anti-doping rule violations in athletics, appear to be particularly high risk for doping. Objective: Using this high-risk, high-pressure context, the main purpose of this study was to investigate the human impact of doping and anti-doping on "clean" athletes. The secondary aim of the study was to better understand the reasons for, and barriers to, competing "clean" among this group of athletes. Method: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 11 elite distance runners from the UK to explore: (1) the reasons and motivations for competing clean. (2) Perceptions of the anti-doping system, and experiences of being part of that system. (3) Views on the prevalence and causes of doping and the impact of doping on the lives of clean athletes. The interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analysed using Reflexive Thematic Analysis. Results: Four major themes were identified: (1) The participants in this study have not been tempted to use prohibited substances or methods; they compete in their sport for the personal satisfaction of seeing how good they can be, rather than in pursuit of winning at all costs. (2) Anti-doping does not currently prevent doping effectively and is not implemented evenly across the globe. (3) Doping was perceived as a major issue and was felt to be borne out of certain sporting cultures in which doping is enabled. (4) Doping has impacted the careers of clean athletes in irreversible ways and presents a continuing challenge to the psychological preparation for competition. Conclusions: Clean athletes suffer negative consequences from both doping and anti-doping. ADOs must collaborate across borders to ensure a more even implementation of anti-doping activities, to facilitate a more level playing field on the global stage. ADOs must also acknowledge the existence of a large group of athletes who would never consider deliberately doping and make anti-doping work for these athletes too.

8 citations

Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2019
TL;DR: An overview of the main methods used by global antidoping organizations to detect the prohibited use of synthetic testosterone and AASs and a brief look at the emerging methods that represent the new frontier of doping detection.
Abstract: Testosterone and anabolic androgenic steroids (AASs) have been widely used to enhance sport performance throughout the last 50 years. The German Democratic Republic used a notoriously comprehensive programme of steroid doping across all major Olympic sports throughout the 1970s and 1980s, and in more recent years, a somewhat similar state-sponsored doping regime has been shown to have operated in Russian sport. The first part of this review summarizes some major examples of testosterone and AAS use in sport. Following on from this is an overview of the main methods used by global antidoping organizations to detect the prohibited use of synthetic testosterone and AASs and a brief look at the emerging methods that represent the new frontier of doping detection.

2 citations

Book ChapterDOI
10 Oct 2018
TL;DR: Ainsworth et al. as discussed by the authors studied the diffusion of performance and image-enhancing drugs among gym goers, exercisers, and athletes, and highlighted the possible motivations behind such use and the best forms of intervention.
Abstract: The fifth chapter, ‘Current Trends in Performance- and Image-Enhancing Substance Use Among Gym Goers, Exercisers, and Athletes’ by Neha Ainsworth, Jake Shelley, and Andrea Petroczi, looks at the diffusion of PIEDs among gym goers, exercisers, and athletes. It profiles the main substances of abuse in fitness settings and emphasizes the possible motivations behind such use and the best forms of intervention. It discusses the performance- and image-enhancing drugs (PIEDs) in the framework of NPS and how the two phenomena might be interrelated.

2 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors employed a qualitative secondary analysis (QSA) approach to re-analyse in-depth life-story interviews of 14 elite athletes (9 males/5 females) from Germany, Italy, and the UK, representing 11 sports across high, medium, and low risk (n = 3) categories for doping.
Abstract: • Commitment to clean sport and anti-doping compliance are two different things. • Clean sport concepts are individualized and differently situated along a continuum. • The way personal values are operationalized and enacted is both complex and fluid. • Clean sport mindset among athletes extends beyond the sporting environment. • Personal integrity and commitment to clean sport matter in values-based education. Despite widespread reference to protecting ‘clean sport’ and the rights of ‘clean athletes’ in anti-doping, to date very little attention has been paid to athletes who are, in majority, committed to clean sport. Understanding elite athletes’ conceptions of ‘clean sport’ and integrity, the psychosocial factors related specifically to athletes’ commitment to personal integrity and clean sport behaviour (as opposed to factors influencing anti-doping rule-breaking) provides a crucial, but currently missing, piece for anti-doping education. Drawing upon two complimentary theories (the Incremental Model of Doping Behaviour, and Personal Integrity) for coding frame, we employed a qualitative secondary analysis (QSA) approach to re-analyse in-depth life-story interviews of 14 elite athletes (9 males/5 females) from Germany, Italy, and the UK, representing 11 sports across high (n = 8), medium (n = 3) and low risk (n = 3) categories for doping. Interview data were originally collected for the SAFE YOU+ project to underpin illustrative case studies produced as educational material. QSA was conducted on this evidence within the constructivist research paradigm using thematic analysis through adductive reasoning. Elite athletes' conceptions of clean sport and commitment to personal integrity presented on a continuum from a strict position to use no substances at all through to the carefully calibrated use of non-prohibited substances/methods for the purpose of enhancing performance. There was a clear distinction between commitment to clean sport and anti-doping. Factors that threaten elite athletes’ personal commitment to clean sport, and thus could push them towards doping included intrinsic concerns (medical, financial, performance), perceptions of legitimacy in the anti-doping system, descriptive doping norms and identity. Factors that may help athletes build and maintain personal commitment to clean sport, and their personal commitment to a clean sport environment, involved acceptance, anti-doping environment, motivation, permitted means to enhance performance and multi-dimensional identity. Doping was seen as the consequence of lapse in, or a lack of, personal commitment to clean sport. For the first time, empirical evidence has differentiated between commitment to clean sport, and anti-doping. Results from this investigation highlighted that the process by which abstract values are operationalized into personal value-systems and priorities, and enacted, are complex and fluid. Values-based, anti-doping education therefore should adopt a holistic and broad approach to reach beyond the values of sport within the context of anti-doping and consider the complex role of personal integrity and commitment to clean sport. Emphasis on the impact of anti-doping rule breaking on peers, society and culture is recommended in addition to greater awareness of one's responsibility for performance-enhancement related actions, and a clean sport mindset among athletes which extends beyond the sporting environment.

1 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors explore the systematic contributors to doping in elite long distance running, along with potential solutions to this issue, from this influential perspective, and conclude that collective responsibility from all stakeholders, which is currently borne by some and not others, is necessary to minimise doping in distance running.
Abstract: ABSTRACT Agents, race-organisers, and sponsors have a key influence in shaping the world of elite professional distance running. Yet to date this important but hard-to-reach stakeholder group has been omitted from the global research landscape of doping and anti-doping. The purpose of this study is to address this gap in the literature and explore the systematic contributors to doping in elite long-distance running, along with potential solutions to this issue, from this influential perspective. Thirteen in-depth interviews were conducted with agents (n = 8) of world-class long-distance runners, major race organisers (n = 3), and sports marketing managers for global brands (n = 2). The interviews were conducted via the phone, audio-recorded, and transcribed verbatim. Reflexive thematic analysis generated three themes which focused on: 1) The framework of professional distance running and the contextual aspects which may contribute to doping risk, 2) the impact of various recruitment strategies on doping and anti-doping, and 3) the lessons that can be learnt from the participants’ first-hand experiences with doping cases and/or managing anti-doping requirements. Reflecting on the sector rather than the sample, the results highlighted that not all commercial stakeholders feel responsible for anti-doping. Collective responsibility from all stakeholders, which is currently borne by some and not others, is necessary to minimise doping in distance running. The challenge is how to convince all stakeholders of their share of the responsibility.

Cited by
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a review of recent developments in anti-doping published between October 2020 and September 2021 is summarized and discussed, particularly focusing on human doping controls and potential applications of new testing strategies to substances and methods of doping specified in the World Anti-Doping Agency's 2021 Prohibited List.
Abstract: Most core areas of anti-doping research exploit and rely on analytical chemistry, applied to studies aiming at further improving the test methods' analytical sensitivity, the assays' comprehensiveness, the interpretation of metabolic profiles and patterns, but also at facilitating the differentiation of natural/endogenous substances from structurally identical but synthetically derived compounds and comprehending the athlete's exposome. Further, a continuously growing number of advantages of complementary matrices such as dried blood spots has been identified and transferred from research to sports drug testing routine applications, with an overall gain of extremely valuable additions to the anti-doping field. In this edition of the annual banned-substance review, literature on recent developments in anti-doping published between October 2020 and September 2021 is summarized and discussed, particularly focusing on human doping controls and potential applications of new testing strategies to substances and methods of doping specified in the World Anti-Doping Agency's 2021 Prohibited List.

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , a self-reported survey with measures of perceived anti-doping legitimacy, social support via expected obedience, perceived trustworthiness and social cognitive variables associated with anti-drug policy support was completed by 1328 competitive athletes in 6 countries (Germany, Greece, Italy, Russia, Serbia, UK).

6 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined whether moral identity was associated with athletes' attitudes towards doping and whether their perceptions of fair play mediated this relationship, and they determined whether these associations differed among non-athletes.
Abstract: Research evidence suggests that athletes’ attitudes towards banned substances are among the strongest predictors of intention to use or actual practice of doping. Previous research has found that personal morality was negatively related to doping attitudes. However, less is known about the role of athletes’ perceptions of fair play on their attitudes towards doping. First, we examined whether moral identity was associated with athletes’ attitudes towards doping and whether their perceptions of fair play mediated this relationship. The second purpose was to determine whether these associations differed among non-athletes. Overall, 365 university students (49.9% males, 55.3% athletes) participated in this study (mean age 22.02, SD = 6.58). They completed questionnaires measuring the aforementioned variables. The results showed that athletes’ moral identity and endorsement of fair play were negatively associated with their attitudes towards doping. The mediation analyses showed that the effect of moral identity on attitudes towards doping was partially mediated by perceptions of fair play (indirect effect, β = −0.10, p < 0.05). Unlike student athletes, non-athletes’ moral identity negatively predicted attitudes towards doping only indirectly, via fair play perception (indirect effect, β = −0.08, p < 0.05). The study provides insights into how a person’s morality and perception of moral values in sport may act as factors related to doping in sport. The practical implications for the promotion of anti-doping attitudes for athletes and separately for student non-athletes were provided together with future research perspectives.

5 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the lived experiences of female anabolic-androgenic steroid (AAS) use from a harm reduction perspective were explored and the experiences of AAS users were explored.
Abstract: Little research exists on the lived experiences of female anabolic-androgenic steroid (AAS) use from a harm reduction perspective. This study aims to address this gap and explore the experiences, p...

4 citations