- May 22, 2011
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Re: Re:
agreed also on bonar.
not sure why posters are putting in such effort to make him look like a medical tool.
Nobody's claimed that he was as good or influential as a Ferrari or Fuentes.
As Ross Tucker nicely argued, this guy is merely symptomatic for several wider issues of cheating and corruption in the UK.[/quote]
Some very good posts by all. I am fascinated with this topic, being a physician myself (Anesthesia and Critical Care). I have always wondered why doctors would slide into the field of helping athletes cheat. Here in the US we have a burgeoning field of "Anti-aging Medicine" which seems to cross over nicely into helping age-group triathletes cheat to get their medals with testosterone, HgH, etc. In Europe I think of Ferrari, Leinders et al approaching this from a perspective of being fans of human physiology and have an academic interest in maximizing performance, rules be damned. Having the ability to prescribe medicine is a powerful tool, but it certainly can be abused. We have a huge problem here with "pill mills" (prescribing potent opioids for cash) by physicians. I suppose prescribing PED's for endurance athletes or steroids for body-builders might be a similar cash rich (but risky !) endeavor.
Thanks again for discussing this topic.
Tony
agreed also on bonar.
not sure why posters are putting in such effort to make him look like a medical tool.
Nobody's claimed that he was as good or influential as a Ferrari or Fuentes.
As Ross Tucker nicely argued, this guy is merely symptomatic for several wider issues of cheating and corruption in the UK.[/quote]
Some very good posts by all. I am fascinated with this topic, being a physician myself (Anesthesia and Critical Care). I have always wondered why doctors would slide into the field of helping athletes cheat. Here in the US we have a burgeoning field of "Anti-aging Medicine" which seems to cross over nicely into helping age-group triathletes cheat to get their medals with testosterone, HgH, etc. In Europe I think of Ferrari, Leinders et al approaching this from a perspective of being fans of human physiology and have an academic interest in maximizing performance, rules be damned. Having the ability to prescribe medicine is a powerful tool, but it certainly can be abused. We have a huge problem here with "pill mills" (prescribing potent opioids for cash) by physicians. I suppose prescribing PED's for endurance athletes or steroids for body-builders might be a similar cash rich (but risky !) endeavor.
Thanks again for discussing this topic.
Tony