Anti-Doping
General
Information
The IPC, together with the International Federations and the
National Paralympic Committees, established the IPC
Anti-Doping Code (January 2004) to prevent in the spirit
of fair play, doping in sport for athletes with a disability
and in conformity with the general principles of the World
Anti-doping code (WADC). The IPC Anti-Doping Code provides
for the prohibition of doping. Doping is defined as the occurrence
of one or more of the anti-doping rule violations set forth
in the IPC Anti-Doping Code and includes:
- the
presence of a prohibited substance in an athlete’s
bodily specimen
- use
or attempted use of a prohibited substance or a prohibited
method
- refusing
or failing to submit to sample collection after notification
- violation
of the requirements regarding athlete availability for out-of-competition
testing
- tampering
with any part of doping control
- possession
of prohibited substances and methods
- trafficking
in any prohibited substance or prohibited method
- administration
or attempted administration of a prohibited substance or
prohibited method to any athlete, or assisting, encouraging,
aiding, abetting, covering up or any other type of complicity
involving an anti-doping rule violation or any attempted
violation.
Anti-Doping
rules, like Competition rules, are sport rules governing the
conditions under which sport is played. All participants (athletes
and athlete support personnel) accept these rules as a condition
of participation and are presumed to have agreed to comply
with the Anti-Doping Code.
Although
a few doping tests were performed at the wheelchair component
of the 1984 Paralympics in Stoke Mandeville, Great Britain,
the first formal testing program at the Paralympic Games was
in Seoul in 1988. Since then, doping controls have been conducted
at all Paralympic Games and most World Championships organized
by the IPC. In 2004, the IPC agreed with the World
Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) on an out-of-competition testing
programme that will be initiated before the ATHENS 2004 Paralympic
Games.
Anti-doping
programmes seek to preserve what is intrinsically valuable
about sport. "The spirit of sport". Thus, the rationale
for doping control in sport is twofold: first, to protect
athletes from the potential harmful side effects that some
drugs can produce; and second, to ensure fair and ethical
competition by preventing athletes from taking prohibited
substances or using prohibited methods in an attempt to increase
performance or violating the spirit of sport. Sanctions are
applied in the event of an anti-doping rule violation of the
Anti-Doping Code. The IPC Anti-Doping Code applies to all
athletes, coaches, trainers, officials and medical and para-medical
personnel working with or treating athletes participating
in or preparing for sports competitions within the Paralympic
Games, within competitions sanctioned by the IPC and within
competitions contested in the framework of the Paralympic
Movement. In line with the need to act in the best interests
of athletes and other members of the Paralympic Movement,
the Code includes provisions to enable appeals to be made,
following decisions taken in accordance with the rules.
The
WADC
Prohibited List is reviewed and updated from time to time
by WADA. Recognizing that there may be cases where athletes
should be allowed to use prohibited substances on the list
for therapeutic purposes, the IPC instituted the Medications
Advisory Panel in 1994 (now known as the Therapeutic Use Exemption
process). Exemptions may be sought from the IPC Therapeutic
Use Exemptions Committee, provided that the medication is
clinically appropriate and does not offer the athlete an advantage.
This process is sport- and case-specific.
There
is as much need for doping control in sport for athletes with
a disability as there is in able-bodied sport. As the Paralympic
Games continue to grow and gain in prestige, the temptation
to enhance performance through the use of prohibited substances
may well increase. It is the objective of the IPC that national
testing of athletes with disabilities be integrated into national
programs. The IPC will continue to co-ordinate testing at
sanctioned events.
(Source
from www.paralympic.org)
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