TY - JOUR
T1 - Anti-doping and other sport integrity challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic
AU - Lima, Giscard
AU - Muniz-Pardos, Borja
AU - Kolliari-Turner, Alexander
AU - Hamilton, Blair
AU - Guppy, Fergus M.
AU - Grivas, Gerasimos
AU - Bosch, Andrew
AU - Borrione, Paolo
AU - Di Gianfrancesco, Alessia
AU - Fossati, Chiara
AU - Pigozzi, Fabio
AU - Pitsiladis, Yannis
N1 - Publisher copyright:
© 2021 Edizioni Minerva Medica
PY - 2021/8
Y1 - 2021/8
N2 - The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has had an unprecedent impact on the world of sport and society at large. Many of the challenges with respect to integrity previously facing competitive sport have been accentuated further during the pandemic. Threats to the integrity of sporting competition include traditional doping, issues of technological fairness, and integration of transgender and intersex athletes in elite sport. The enforced lull in competitive sport provides an unprecedented opportunity for stakeholders in sport to focus on unresolved integrity issues and develop and implement long-lasting solutions. There needs to be a concerted effort to focus on the many technological innovations accelerated by and perfected during COVID-19 that have enabled us to work from home, such as teaching students on-line, applications for medical advice, prescriptions and referrals, and treating patients in hospitals/care homes via video links and use these developments and innovations to enhance sport integrity and anti-doping procedures. Positive sports integrity actions will require a considered application of all such technology, as well as the inclusion of "omics" technology, big data, bioinformatics and machine learning/artificial intelligence approaches to modernize sport. Applications include protecting the health of athletes, considered non-discriminative integration of athletes into elite sport, intelligent remote testing to improve the frequency of anti-doping tests, detection windows, and the potential combination with omics technology to improve the tests' sensitivity and specificity in order to protect clean athletes and deter doping practices.
AB - The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has had an unprecedent impact on the world of sport and society at large. Many of the challenges with respect to integrity previously facing competitive sport have been accentuated further during the pandemic. Threats to the integrity of sporting competition include traditional doping, issues of technological fairness, and integration of transgender and intersex athletes in elite sport. The enforced lull in competitive sport provides an unprecedented opportunity for stakeholders in sport to focus on unresolved integrity issues and develop and implement long-lasting solutions. There needs to be a concerted effort to focus on the many technological innovations accelerated by and perfected during COVID-19 that have enabled us to work from home, such as teaching students on-line, applications for medical advice, prescriptions and referrals, and treating patients in hospitals/care homes via video links and use these developments and innovations to enhance sport integrity and anti-doping procedures. Positive sports integrity actions will require a considered application of all such technology, as well as the inclusion of "omics" technology, big data, bioinformatics and machine learning/artificial intelligence approaches to modernize sport. Applications include protecting the health of athletes, considered non-discriminative integration of athletes into elite sport, intelligent remote testing to improve the frequency of anti-doping tests, detection windows, and the potential combination with omics technology to improve the tests' sensitivity and specificity in order to protect clean athletes and deter doping practices.
KW - Pandemics
KW - Sports
KW - Doping in sports
KW - Technology
KW - Transgender persons
UR - https://research.brighton.ac.uk/en/publications/92eb3f5f-aa4f-4fdb-af78-4910e93d05fb
U2 - 10.23736/S0022-4707.21.12777-X
DO - 10.23736/S0022-4707.21.12777-X
M3 - Review article
C2 - 34256541
SN - 0022-4707
VL - 61
SP - 1173
EP - 1183
JO - The Journal of Sports Medicine and Physical Fitness
JF - The Journal of Sports Medicine and Physical Fitness
IS - 8
ER -