健康文化与跑步:非精英跑步者对兴奋剂和补充的理解。

April Henning
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引用次数: 5

摘要

非精英水平的路跑选手经常以健康为目的参加这项运动,作为对自己的健康负责的一种方式。通常,这些跑步者使用膳食补充剂作为改善健康和潜在地提高跑步表现的一种方式。补品不同于违禁的性能增强药物(ped),因为它们是合法的,而且可以广泛获得,尽管监管非常宽松。研究表明,随着交叉污染和标签错误的补充剂案例不断被发现,补充剂和被禁的ped之间的界限越来越模糊。这类产品可能对毫无戒心的消费者构成健康风险。尽管反兴奋剂机构对精英跑步者发出了有关这些风险的警告,但任何运动或反兴奋剂机构都很少告诉非精英跑步者要小心服用补充剂。然而,媒体对兴奋剂丑闻的报道铺天盖地,这些丑闻通常只涉及体育运动中禁用的几种物质。简而言之,这些跑步者经常被留给自己导航补充剂的使用,许多人将补充剂的可用性与安全性混为一谈。这篇文章探讨了这些日常膳食补充剂在非精英跑步者中的做法。从对纽约市28名非精英跑步者的采访中,我讨论了在健康文化背景下对兴奋剂和膳食补充剂使用的看法和理解。访谈数据显示,社会对膳食补充剂的接受程度及其在更广泛公众中的广泛使用强化了非精英跑步者的观念,即这些产品客观上是安全和健康的。我认为,基于他们对补充剂安全性的假设,非精英跑步者认为膳食补充剂与ped明显不同,这种差异鼓励他们作为健康和表现辅助工具使用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Health Culture and Running: Non-Elite Runners' Understandings of Doping and Supplementation.
Participants at the non-elite level of road running often take up the sport for purposes of health, as a way of taking responsibility for their own well-being. Often, these runners use dietary supplements as a way to improve health and to potentially enhance running performance. Supplements are distinct from banned performance enhancing drugs (PEDs), as they are legal and widely available, though very loosely regulated. Research demonstrates that the line between supplements and banned PEDs is increasingly blurry as cases of cross-contaminated and mislabeled supplements continue to be found. Such products may pose health risks to unsuspecting consumers. Despite anti-doping agencies' warnings to elite runners about these risks, non-elite runners are rarely told by any sport or anti-doping body to be wary of supplements. They are, however, inundated with media coverage of doping scandals usually involving only a few of the substances banned in sport. In short, these runners are often left to navigate supplement use on their own and many conflate supplement availability with safety. This article explores these routine dietary supplement practices among non-elite runners. Drawing from interviews with 28 non-elite runners in New York City, I discuss the perceptions and understandings of doping and dietary supplement use within the context of health culture. Interview data reveal that the social acceptance of dietary supplements and their widespread use among the broader public reinforce the notion among non-elite runners that such products are objectively safe and healthy. I argue that based on their assumptions of supplement safety, non-elite runners view dietary supplements as distinctly different from PEDs and that this difference encourages their use as health and performance aids.
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