Steroids
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Steroids - Jon Sterngass
With thanks to John M. Roll, Professor and Associate Dean for Research and Director of the Program of Excellence in the Addictions at Washington State University College of Nursing
Copyright © 2011 Marshall Cavendish Corporation
Published by Marshall Cavendish Benchmark
An imprint of Marshall Cavendish Corporation
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. Request for permission should be addressed to the Publisher, Marshall Cavendish Corporation, 99 White Plains Road, Tarrytown, NY 10591. Tel: (914) 332-8888, fax: (914) 332-1888.
Website: www.marshallcavendish.us
This publication represents the opinions and views of the author based on Jon Sterngass’s personal experience, knowledge, and research. The information in this book serves as a general guide only. The author and publisher have used their best efforts in preparing this book and disclaim liability rising directly and indirectly from the use and application of this book.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Sterngass, Jon • Steroids / Jon Sterngass. p. cm. —(Controversy!) • Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-60870-292-3
1. Anabolic steroids—Juvenile literature. I. Title. • RC1230.S725 2011 362.29—dc22 • 2009033406
Publisher: Michelle Bisson • Art Director: Anahid Hamparian Series Designer: Alicia Mikles • Photo research by Lindsay Aveilhe
The photographs in this book are used by permission and through the courtesy of: iStockphoto.com/Steve Goodwin: cover; Hiroko Masuike/Getty Images: 4; Andrew Holbrooke/ Corbis: 8; Matt Sullivan/Reuters: 11; AP Photo/DEA: 18; Darryl Estrine/Getty Images: 21; AP Photo/LM Otero, File: 31; Popperfoto/Getty Images: 36; AFP/Getty Images: 41, 44; Felix R. Cid/Redux: 51; The Granger Collection: 59; Milk Photographie/Corbis: 64; Dr. Jurgen Scriba/Photo Researchers, Inc.: 73; AP Photo/Enid News & Eagle, Andy Carpenean: 75; Chris Pizzello/Reuters: 81; Barton Silverman/The New York Times/ Redux: 87; Clive Mason/Getty Images: 93; Newscom: 100; Olivier Morin/AFP /Getty Images: 104; Win McNamee/Getty Images: 107; David Silverman/Getty Images: 111.
Printed in Malaysia (T) 1 3 5 6 4 2
CONTENTS
1.The Controversy over Anabolic Steroids
2. What Are Anabolic Steroids?
3.The Use of Anabolic Steroids in Sports
4. Nonathletic Issues: Paternalism and Drug Testing
5. Athletic Issues: Cheating and Sports
6. The Future Debate
Notes
Further information
Bibliography
Index
Marion Jones was not only stripped of her five Olympic gold medals as a result of her steroid use, but served six months in prison for lying under oath. For a time, she became a public symbol of the evils of steroid use.
Steroids Scandal
In the late 1990s, Marion Jones was a female American track and field superstar. In 1998, Jones achieved the amazing feat of winning every race in which she competed. She was the first woman in fifty years to win the one hundred meters, two hundred meters, and long jump, becoming U.S. champion in all three. That year alone, Jones earned about $7 million from endorsements.
In the 2000 Summer Olympics in Australia, Jones gave the greatest performance by a woman track athlete in Olympic history. She won an astonishing five medals—three ofthem gold—including the one hundred/two hundred double and the long jump. She won the one hundred by .37 seconds, the widest margin since the Olympics began using electronic timing in 1968.
Marion Jones returned to the United States as an Olympic hero. She was featured on the covers of Vogue, Time, Newsweek, and Sports Illustrated for Women. Jones had gained millions of new fans from the television coverage of the Summer Games. She was in great demand by advertisers and had a multimillion-dollar endorsement deal with Nike. Jones finished the 2001 season ranked #1 in the world in both the one hundred and the two hundred.
Jones’s time of triumph, however, was short-lived. In 2003, the U.S. government issued a search warrant for the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative (BALCO), a California business that specialized in blood and urine analysis and food supplements. The search uncovered records of purchases, doping calendars, and various blood-test results connected to many professional athletes, including Jones and her former coach. BALCO founder Victor Conte repeatedly accused Jones of using performance-enhancing drugs and said he watched her inject herself with steroids.
In 2004, Jones sued Victor Conte for $25 million for defamation of character. She claimed Conte’s lies hurt her reputation and cost her endorsement money. Under oath before a grand jury, and in many public statements throughout her career, Jones insisted that she never used anabolic steroids or any performance-enhancing drugs. I’m drug-free, always have been and always will be,
she said in 2004.
In fact, between 2000 and 2007, Jones had used a number of undetectable performance-enhancing substances such as human growth hormone, insulin, and the endurance booster EPO. She was also using The Clear,
an anabolic steroid administered by placing a couple of drops under the tongue. In those years, she had been tested more than twenty times and not a single test had come back positive for performance-enhancing drugs.
In 2007, Jones publicly admitted her past steroid use and retired from track and field. She confessed to doping several times before the Sydney Olympics and continued using it after.
Jones returned all five of her Olympic medals and in 2008, she served six months in federal prison for lying under oath to two grand juries about her personal use of anabolic steroids.
In seven years, the use of steroids had transformed Marion Jones from a world record holder and American hero into, as one sporting official called her, one of the biggest frauds in sporting history.
Controversy
Anabolic steroids are synthetic substances related to naturally produced male sex hormones such as testosterone. Steroids imitate testosterone’s effects. In the United States, doctors prescribe steroids for a variety of medical conditions. However, perhaps as many as a million Americans of all ages use steroids to improve their looks or boost athletic performance.
This latter use of steroids makes them controversial. In 1991 the U.S. government listed anabolic steroids as a Schedule III controlled substance. This makes the possession of steroids without a prescription a federal crime punishable by up to seven years in prison. Users of steroids for nontherapeutic reasons act in violation of federal law and the rules of all sports federations.
Nonetheless, people keep using them. Anabolic steroids produce increases in strength and allow a person to train longer and harder. Anabolic steroid use, combined with weight training and adequate dietary protein intake, can build muscle mass and strength beyond weight training alone. Negative short-term side effects of steroid use seem to be reversible, although long-term, high-dose effects are largely unknown. However, many adults, whether professional athletes or not, view anabolic steroids and their possible negative side effects as a fair trade-off for better looks or improved performance in sports. These people take steroids the same way they would use the best diet or the best training techniques.
This would be a short book if the only issue regarding anabolic steroids and other performance-enhancing substances was their legality. In the United States, they are not legal for nontherapeutic reasons. On that level, there is nothing more to write. The use of steroids is against the rules and this is cheating. The more interesting philosophical question, however, is whether the laws and rules should be changed to allow the use of anabolic steroids.
General Use of Anabolic Steroids
Traditionally, the use of anabolic steroids has been seen as an issue affecting elite athletics. The media’s depiction of steroids usually involves major sporting events such as the Olympics or occasions when sportspeople have tested positive for a banned substance. However, steroid use is not restricted to athletes. Most Americans who have used steroids are not looking to set a new world’s record but simply to look and feel better. Many steroid users are adolescents under the age of eighteen, and this raises a host of different issues.
Many steroid users are teenagers, some of whom get the idea to use steroids as children wanting to be strong like their built-up, muscular dads.
The controversy over nonathletes who take steroids shares many similarities with the general debate over the legality of drugs in the United States. First, there is the medical question: how dangerous are steroids? Hundreds of studies have attempted to answer this question, yet their results have varied widely. Whether dangerous or not, there is the larger philosophical question of the proper role of government in people’s personal lives. Should the U.S. government restrict the choices of informed and consenting adults who want to use anabolic steroids for cosmetic reasons? Many Americans already abuse dangerous substances