Deterrence by risk of detection? An inquiry into how elite athletes perceive the deterrent effect of the doping testing regime in their sport

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Aims: A central paradigm of global anti-doping policy is detection-based deterrence, i.e. the risk of testing and exclusion from sport are effective doping deterrents. This paper investigates how elite athletes perceive the deterrent effect of the testing strategy in their sport and explores whether and how specific factors such as the frequency of testing influence athletes’ perceptions of testing as a deterrent. 

Methods: 645 Danish elite athletes completed a web-based questionnaire about their perceptions of testing efforts in their sport. 

Findings: 75% of the athletes considered the likelihood that a test would prove positive to be a deterrent. By contrast, only 40% found the risk of being selected for testing to be a deterrent. Athletes tested frequently and athletes from doping-risk sports were more likely to perceive testing as a deterrent. In total, 24% regarded neither the likelihood of testing nor detection as deterrents. 8% did not consider the likelihood of testing and detection nor the ban from sport as deterrents. 

Conclusions: Testing programmes–as a strategy to detect and deter doping–are no great deterrent for many athletes. The results highlight the limitations of detection-based deterrence and emphasise a need to give higher priority to additional prevention-orientated strategies. Recommondations are outlined.

Original languageEnglish
JournalDrugs: Education, Prevention and Policy
Volume24
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)206-219
Number of pages14
ISSN0968-7637
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017

    Research areas

  • Anti-doping policy, Deterrence, Drug testing, Elite sport, Prevention, Survey, World Anti-doping Code

ID: 196469060