Cloxxki said:
In the case of Norway, how would it be really to send the athletes a referral to another WADA accredited sports fysician to addert their athma "suffering"?
The athlete would be conditioned for 24 hours in a decent hotel, not able to take any substances to trigger an astmatic response. Then a quick maximum effort test, lactate levels monitored, of course. And then with a NORMAL dose of salbutamol. 200mgr. Not the legal limit, that's for patients and junkies.
It's insane really that in this day and age, the early 90's so far in the past, that we can still use our own preferred doc to sign our TUE's. It basically guarantees corruption, medical malpractice, sporting fraud.
I truly believe this is one (there are a couple more) of areas where the system collapses. The doctor is the authoritative man (woman). We perceive of the doctor as an honest professional (often rightly, sometimes wrongly). Team doctors are included in that category. As are FIS's own medical or anti-doping staff, for that matter. The system is not well (it is rotten, to be more direct); in Norway's case, that was indicated a few years' back with Mads Drange's book on "the Big Doping Bluff" (freely translated from Norwegian). I must admit I haven't read it, though I will; but I know the main contents of it. The Norwegian anti-doping institution(s) is simply dysfunctional. You really refer to one of the main reasons why: the institution is
national. (Drange was a scientist employed by the anti-doping agency, but he eventually quit given the deficiencis of the system (they were basically unable to catch any of what he could clearly see were dopers); the book's and Drange's newsworthiness lasted for only a few days, the process was subdued by the same mechanism by which other such criticisms - as 3-4 Nordic documentaries - have been, that is, through massive Ski-Federation reactions and athletes' outrage).
The system is non-functioning. Those with a minimum of analytical capabilities see that, although there aren't that many in my country. The elephant in the room, though, is proof. Or a lack of it. Because - virtually by definition - you cannot prove anything when it comes to our skiers and doping. But that was before Sundby and Therese, because there you might, but just might... (We're extremely hung-up here on due processes and judicial proofs, and all that, which obviously work to the benefit of the dopers, but that is the way it is.)