Dr. Stephane Bermon

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Jul 11, 2013
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The recent IAAF debacle got me thinking about Stéphane Bermon so I did a little searching.

It seems he no longer longer listed as member of the IAAF medical and anti-doping commission.
http://www.iaaf.org/about-iaaf/structure/commissions#iaaf-medical-anti-doping-commission

I wonder what happened to the good doctor?

Searching for his name in combination with IAAF gives a most recent result of him giving a lecture about IAAF standards in some conference for Women and health in late october.

He also seems to be a private man, I cannot find either facebook or linkedin profile, which is quite odd as one could imagine some branding would do good for someone holding high positions in sports and running a Monaco based clinic.

Perhaps his repute make no need for such trivialities.

Also found (perhaps posted before) that Froome had denied any link to Bermon other than going to him a few times for "pulmonary function tests with Dr Bermon,"

http://www.nation.co.ke/sports/othersports/Doping-suspicions-worthwhile-in-yellow-says-Chris-Froome/-/1951306/2805468/-/31i6wi/-/index.html

Which is in sharp contrast to earlier links stating him as Froome's personal doctor.
Particularly in relation to the TUE application in Romandie 2014.

It seems the correction from camp Froome came only after the media this year caught up on connection between Bermon and Vino/Astana.

Now remind me what was it CIRC report stated about Monaco?

Oh yes:

"allegations suggest that a “package” of support was offered to riders, which included tax
evasion advice, training and doping programmes, legal advice, false contracts, the
involvement of tax consultancy companies to manage secondary contracts, and money
laundering. Athletes from other sports are alleged to have been involved, and a variety of
“service levels” were offered to cater for the elite professional through to the amateur
with connections and money. Most activities are alleged to have taken place in Italy and
Switzerland (and to a more limited extent in Tenerife and Monaco)"

Now I wonder if has stepped down from IAAF duties, then why and when.
If not, then why isn't he listed on the IAAF website.
 
Feb 18, 2013
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UaE3oaYl2dM

Dr. Stephane Bermon on Tackling Obesity... He doesn't have much to add or say that is especially pertinent, but it's nevertheless interesting that he's one of the experts discussing this.

Also:

It also seems as though the good doctor has a good understanding of Aicar and GW1516, based on the abstract from this article. Unfortunately I don't have access to the full paper, but I think it would make an interesting read.

http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/90374872/from-gene-engineering-gene-modulation-manipulation-can-we-prevent-detect-gene-doping-sports
 
Oct 16, 2010
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great work here by heart attack man and mrhender.

Stephane Bermon is playing in the same league as Saugy and several other 'antidoping' experts.
 
Oct 16, 2010
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It's not difficult to see how any cyclist or athlete could benefit from working with Bermon.
Not only is he an antidoping specialist (so knows his way around testing and grey areas), also specializes in growth factor and reinjecting ones own blood:
http://www.im2s.mc/offre-de-soins/medecine/facteurs-de-croissance/

g-translate:
Why be treated by one's own blood?

The injection of autologous platelet concentrate (or growth factor) is an alternative treatment, natural and innovative. The principle of this treatment is simple: it is to get these growth factors in very few areas that are vascularized tendons, ligaments, muscles and damaged cartilage to stimulate their repair, via neovascularization, collagen synthesis , and the activation of repair cells.
if somebody could shed some light on that method (and on how blood injection relates to 'growth factor' and/or growth hormones?) I'd be much obliged.
 
Oct 16, 2010
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It seems at some point Bermon was intended to become official(?) member of Astana's medical team.
This either never materialized or it seems to have been short-lived. (Or tinfoil hat option: it did materialize but they decided to keep it very secret.)

Kashechkin in 2011 on astana and Bermon
I signed here for two and a half years. The objective is the Tour de France. We want to build a team around me, either in 2012 or 2013. I am followed by Stéphane Bermon (specializing in the Monaco Institute of Sports Medicine and Surgery). I live in Monaco since 2003, and we want to ensure that monitoring of the riders are insured by him. He also intend to come this Thursday in the Vuelta to get acquainted with the riders, the medical staff and get a warrant to follow us.
http://rmcsport.bfmtv.com/cyclisme/kashechkin-aucune-trahison-contre-vinokourov-176526.html
 
Oct 16, 2010
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Here's the full footage of Bermon testing Kashechkin (mrhender once posted a screenshot of that).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MzMo017bTI4
It's from 2011.
The testing bit starts at around 3:00 mins, but Bermon plays a role in the entire 13 mins.
There is confirmation in there from Kashechkin himself that Bermon was assigned as the team doc for the whole of Astana.
 
Oct 16, 2010
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Bermon was/is(?) working with Laure Manaudou, female French top swimmer.
http://www.im2s.mc/check-de-laure-manaudou/
In March 2012, prior to the Games, Manaudou was forced to admit she had missed two doping tests.
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/french-swimming-glamour-girl-laure-manaudou-stressed-by-threat-of-ban-after-missing-drug-tests/story-fn9dirj0-1226311279759

might be nothing to do with Froome's missed tests.
But then again, glowing athletes do need somebody on the inside to tell them when the testers come.
 
Feb 18, 2013
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I think out of everything, the link of Bermon to Astana has to be the most damning... There can't be too much doubt as to what 'services' he would be providing for them, especially given the timeframe involved.

I am certainly convinced that this guy has/had more to do with Froome than has been reported.
 
Jul 11, 2013
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Just found out via Twitter that LeMonde has two articles on/wth Dr. Bermon.

http://www.lemonde.fr/recherche/?keywords=bermon&qt=recherche_globale

One is from 18th december 2015 where he reveals to have resigned his position at IAAF.

Next one is from a couple of days ago where he talks about smart people cheating the sytem.

Can anyone with Le Monde access and better french skills than me answer to a couple of questions:

-Why did he resign at the IAAF (what is the article saying about the circumstances) ?

-What are his particular comments with regards to microdosing and cheating the system? (what is the message)

-Anything else of note? (views on IAAF, comments on cycling, his connections there etc)

Thanks in advance.
 
Oct 16, 2010
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^that could be interesting reading.
i looked in vain for free access to those lemonde articles, but did come across a comprehensive CV of Bermon:
http://www.eubylonhealthcare.com/de/spezialisten/st%C3%A9phane-bermon
which a.o. says
Former Professional Positions:
Head Physician of O.G.C.Nice Pro Soccer Team: 1999-2003
Physician of the Junior Male Road Team (French Cycling Federation): 2004
Physician of the Professional Cycling Team “La Française des Jeux” 2007 – 2009
So he would probably have been at FDJ when Aurelien Duval tested positive in October 2009.
http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/duval-tests-positive-provisionally-suspended/
 
Jul 11, 2013
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sniper said:
^that could be interesting reading.
i looked in vain for free access to those lemonde articles, but did come across a comprehensive CV of Bermon:
http://www.eubylonhealthcare.com/de/spezialisten/st%C3%A9phane-bermon
which a.o. says
Former Professional Positions:
Head Physician of O.G.C.Nice Pro Soccer Team: 1999-2003
Physician of the Junior Male Road Team (French Cycling Federation): 2004
Physician of the Professional Cycling Team “La Française des Jeux” 2007 – 2009
So he would probably have been at FDJ when Aurelien Duval tested positive in October 2009.
http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/duval-tests-positive-provisionally-suspended/

I once did some research on the development of the team while he was doctor there.
If one rider at the team made big progress it was Phillipe Gilbert who is also a monaco based rider (don't recall when he moved there though). Of course this is clutching at straws because Gilbert was young and his progression could be due to a number of factors, neverthless it is not unthinkable that he could have gotten some advice from the good doctor.
 
Apr 21, 2012
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Re:

mrhender said:
Just found out via Twitter that LeMonde has two articles on/wth Dr. Bermon.

http://www.lemonde.fr/recherche/?keywords=bermon&qt=recherche_globale

One is from 18th december 2015 where he reveals to have resigned his position at IAAF.

Next one is from a couple of days ago where he talks about smart people cheating the sytem.

Can anyone with Le Monde access and better french skills than me answer to a couple of questions:

-Why did he resign at the IAAF (what is the article saying about the circumstances) ?

-What are his particular comments with regards to microdosing and cheating the system? (what is the message)

-Anything else of note? (views on IAAF, comments on cycling, his connections there etc)

Thanks in advance.

Bermon explains he resigned in early 2014 because despite he tried to alert many times the leading committee of IAAF on the ticking bomb of corruption scandal (Diack & co) in late 2012, nothing happened. He also says Olga Kaniskina's ferritin levels were frightening and he thinks she won't live old. Regarding cycling, in today's article, he means the riders are smarter than athletes and they adapted quicker to biopassport hence the lower number of case in cycling, first cases for athletics being so blatant and easy to prove that the panel could not deal with all of them
 
Apr 21, 2012
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Article from December 2015... via Google Translate...

Stéphane Bermon, the impotent observer of the IAAF

Member of the Anti-Doping Commission of the International Athletics Federation, he resigned there almost two years after finding many worrying cases.
There are many whistleblowers to have warned against the abuses of large institutions or companies. But can we publicly denounce the excesses of a house which is considered as "[his] family"? Stéphane Bermon could not solve it. He resigned, quietly, there are almost two years, from his position as member of the Anti-Doping Commission of the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), he held since 2004. When Le Monde had contacted him in in December 2014, to speak on the situation of the institution, he had opposed a polite refusal, "not those who howl with the wolves."
At the time, the world athletics just cashing a first violent shaking. On 3 December 2014, a report in the German journalist Hans-Joachim Seppelt on the ARD TV station denouncing institutionalized doping in Russia. The same day, the sports daily L'Equipe and ARD evoke an even more embarrassing affair for the IAAF: some members of the international federation would have covered the doping of a Russian marathon runner, Liliya Chobhoukova, in exchange for money. Other athletes were protected. The replica of the first quake was of even greater magnitude with indictments in early November, some members of the IAAF, including former President, the Senegalese Lamine Diack, and the head of the fight against doping, the French Gabriel Dollé, for "passive corruption".

This fall, Stéphane Bermon agreed to meet in the World. So, he said, to restore certain truths about the IAAF, for which he is now outside consultant since the beginning of the year. He does not hide it, he spoke of the principle of maintenance Capdevielle Thomas and Pierre-Yves Garnier, the "friends" who now co-leading medical and anti-doping department. Former professional snowboarder, practicing in the Principality "for twelve or thirteen" - among his patients, a Chris Froome - This sports doctor has long been interested in the fight against doping. In 2004, Gabriel Dollé to integrate contacts the Anti-Doping Commission of the International Federation. Within this structure which includes a dozen members based all over the world, Stéphane Bermon interests include the hyerandrogénie (women with abnormal levels of testosterone).
In 2011, during the world championships in Daegu, as part of his research on the subject, it has access to blood data of athletes. For the first time, all athletes were subject to controls. "At testosterone but also in the blood data, there were mind-blowing stuff. "Russia, whose anti-doping agency has resigned collectively, Thursday, December 17, already collects doping cases. "Many people we caught were Russians. We said, "But they do not understand the message!" Initially, we had a real problem: we were overwhelmed by the amount of cases of passports (abnormal). It was not like in cycling, where they had it at the beginning and then the cyclists are smart, they soon learned to bypass the passport with microdosing, etc. But then we did the heavy, there were incredible changes with dozens of cases, including many Russians. "
"I got scared"
For some athletes, the data border on the unreal, "When I saw the ferritin in Daegu, an athlete Olga Kaniskina (Russian walker), I got scared. She does not live old, I think. It has a ferritin 5000 (micrograms / liter blood). Talk to any specialist, a ferritin 5000, it messes up your liver, heart, a big part of your endocrine system. This was not the only one. Gabriel Dollé, members of the commission, there was a discussion. I pushed, saying, "I'm still a doctor, I am aware of these data, I can not say I did not see, it's not possible." "
Yet this same Kaniskina participate in the London Games, in summer 2012, alongside three other walkers - Borchin, Kirdyapkin and Bakoulin - that would not have been there. Stéphane Bermon realizes that the situation is completely abnormal. At the end of the summer of 2012, he decided to write an article that envisages a time to send to the world: "I had so many balls. It was a kind of psychotherapy for me. "He did not send his article. The text, scheduled for publication is "soft", but refers to the possible abuses of the biological passport. The December 24, 2012, he sent an email to much more explicit Capdevielle Thomas and Pierre-Yves Garnier, which he praises the work: "You know that WADA [World Anti-Doping Agency], through the transparency of the passport biological, became aware of the drift orchestrated by our president (Lamine Diack), its immediate surroundings and its Honorary Treasurer (Valentin Balakhnichev). There is certainly cheating and influence peddling (VTB bank network, Valentin Balakhnichev Habib Cissé, President Diack, others?). I do not think that WADA will come Jan. 14, 2013 to wish us Happy New Year or Epiphany.

In early 2014, commissioned Stéphane Bermon d. Not without going to see Gabriel Dollé and Cheikh Thiaré the Lamine Diack's chief of staff. At first, he said, "Gabriel, whatever you had done so far, you can at any time say" I stop and I take my files. I go to the president and tell him to stop this or I denounce all. "(...) Obviously I have not been heard. "The interview with the second will not be more fruitful.
Despite the difficult environment, Bermon continues to praise the work of the IAAF, "the most advanced anti-doping federation". But "the damage is done and despite the economic downturn, it will be complicated," especially as a rough fight looks between WADA and the IAAF. In her email of 24 December 2012, Stéphane Bermon concluded: "I know you swallow reptile growing sizes every day ... I think you're all smart enough to have understood that according to near turn which will take the events we can cause or suffer, for us to choose, an earthquake to the IAAF. "
 
Jul 11, 2013
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Thank you Gregga.

Some interesting reading, all though not sure I understand everything in the second post correctly.
Will be commenting on the content later.
 
Apr 21, 2012
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Today's article :

Doping: the limits of the biological passport

Presented as the parade against blood doping, the biological passport is a collateral victim of the corruption scandal that hits world athletics.
Roselyne Bachelot was right. In October 2007, two months before the introduction of the biological passport in cycling, the former Minister of Health and Sports ensured that we attended there for "a radical change that will mark (it) the history of the struggle doping ". Indeed, the biological passport - which compiles hematology sports made during the inspections - has marked the history of anti-doping, but not exactly how Ms Bachelot envisaged.

Become the indispensable tool of blackmail led an amazing behind the scenes of world athletics, it is the collateral victim of the scandal that shook the International Athletics Federation (IAAF). The Athlete Biological Passport (ABP), the result of significant scientific advances presented at birth as the parade researchers blood doping, has never been as much talk about him.

Abnormal variations

In an ironic reversal of history, it is the users of the most zealous biological passport which highlighted weaknesses, using for personal gain access to blood data of athletes: Lamine Diack, the former president of a federation that was the second to set up the system, and his former boss Medical and Anti-Doping Department, Gabriel Dollé, who was promoting. They have been indicted by the national financial prosecutor as Habib Cissé, personal legal adviser Lamine Diack.

"All three agreed that the treatment of Russian biological passports has been achieved in an unusual way," summarized the prosecutor Eliane Houlette Thursday, January 14, in the closing press conference of the Independent Committee of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA ), held in Munich.

Indirect detection of doping tool, the biological passport in his hematological pane, the only really developed to date, can detect abnormal blood changes and punish illegal manipulations, although no prohibited substance was detected during controls. It became possible to judge the integrity of a sport by studying changes in the hemoglobin - the protein found in red cells and promotes the transport of oxygen -, the evolution of its reticulocyte - its cells young red - and clues obtained from different blood data, including off-score. In theory, a handful of samples can be enough to confuse a cheater. If abnormal data are identified, they are submitted to a panel of three experts, who will determine whether these variations can not be explained other than by doping.

Targeting athletes

The IAAF has established the biological passport in 2009, a year after the International Cycling Union (UCI). First athlete suspended on the basis of its PBA in 2012, the obscure Portuguese Helder Ornelas marathoner has since been joined by 68 other athletes. Either the vast majority of the 85 athletes alike, the UCI claiming 13 of his side.

The contribution of the passport is not limited to the suspension of these 85 cheats for most anonymous of their sport. On the one hand, it allows the targeting of athletes suspicious blood values ​​on which the controls are now concentrated. "The passport has always been a way to target, said the Director General of WADA, David Howman. And now it can lead to nighttime checks [authorized since 2015], as the passport can be an element that leads to think, we have to catch this guy the night. "

Moreover, its power is deterrent, at least initially. "You measure the results by number of open cases, but the passport is primarily a tool for targeting and deterrence, argues Francesca Rossi, President of the Cycling Anti-Doping Foundation (CADF), an independent panel convened by the UCI. Deterrence is a very important way to combat doping. Scientific papers have shown that the lack of biological passport caused an increase in doping practices. "

"It is obvious that the behavior of a large number of sports has changed since the introduction of the passport, abounds Michel Audran, professor of pharmacy at the University Montpellier I, blood doping specialist and expert for the IAAF. This has at least put an end to certain abuses. When looking at passports, if there was 10% to 20% of abnormal early -all passports are not subject to sanctions - we fell significantly to less than 5%. There has been a change. "

Thomas Capdevielle, who co-directs with Pierre-Yves Garnier, the anti-doping department of the IAAF, is also convinced that long term, the biological passport is preferable to traditional methods. "If we are given the choice, for an athlete, between going to a couple of EPO tests, the detection windows are reduced, and invest in the passport to the controls, the second option will be taken, he says .With the passport, it will be a matter of time, from the time when it was abnormal data. "A question of time, but how?

Who's Who of athletics

In 2001, the IAAF has taken the initiative to blood tests in order to better understand its athletes and to target certain. The results were striking. German television channel ARD and the British newspaper Sunday Times in August 2015 revealed the worrying proportion of abnormal values ​​in endurance events specialists, having got hold of a database of some 12 500 samples taken between 2001 and 2012. The IAAF has complained to the following revelations around this database. Among the athletes with very atypical values, certain hazardous to health, a significant proportion has never been suspended for doping, as was evident Le Monde, which has obtained the dizzying database.


The world

Some of these athletes showed abnormal values ​​before 2009 and could not be sanctioned on the basis of a biological passport, then non-existent, as noted by the independent commission of WADA. But others have obviously continued to handle blood or to help stimulants erythropoiesis, such as EPO, favoring oxygen uptake. The IAAF has no more able or willing to suspend. This database endless and uncontrolled data veritable Who's Who of athletics 2000s, allows finger touch the current limits of the PBA.

Several leading Russian athletes whose biological passport showed abnormal data from 2009 or 2010 were involved in the London Games in 2012. It was not until 2014 or 2015 that they were finally suspended. Their cases, however, settled for a long time by the committee of three experts - the French Michel Audran, German Olaf Schumacher and the Italian Giuseppe D'Onofrio for the IAAF - dragged on. Habib Cissé, counsel IAAF staff, addressed these issues in its own way, with the blessing of Gabriel Dollé and Lamine Diack. Investigators ascertained that such long delays are due to corruption.

Olympics 2020: suspicions about doping

This is a footnote page containing the potentially most explosive revelation of the report of the independent commission of WADA released January 14.
"It is said that Turkey has lost the support of LD [Lamine Diack, a former president of the International Association of Athletics Federations] because they have not paid 4 to $ 5 million sponsorship to the Diamond League [major athletics circuit] or the IAAF, is it written in footnote 36 on page 34. According to the report [the conversation], the Japanese would have paid such a sum. The Olympics were awarded in 2020 in Tokyo. "
This contract was mentioned during a discussion between a son of Diack, Ibrahima, and the family of the Turkish athlete Asli Alptekin. Ibrahima Diack would thus wanted to believe that he could choke a case of abnormal biological passport.

But all the time does not necessarily hide irregularities on the part of the IAAF. Doping department of the institution, as in other international federations, it stresses the cumbersome procedures. "There's a long process to follow from the time the profile is atypical," says Thomas Capdevielle. A "process" which often takes several months or even years when the athlete out of competition is difficult to control.

Microdosing

Athletics is however not the worst off. At the establishment of the PBA, anti-doping officials faced an unmanageable situation, with cartoonish passport data accumulating on their offices. The World Championships in Daegu (South Korea), where some 2,000 athletes tested gave cold sweats to those responsible for the IAAF. "We were overwhelmed by the amount of cases of passports [abnormal] explains Stéphane Bermon today outside consultant to the IAAF, after resigning from its Anti-Doping Commission in early 2014. It was not like in cycling, where they had it at the beginning. And cyclists are smart, they soon learned to bypass the passport with microdosing, etc. But here we had heavy, there were incredible changes with dozens of cases, including many Russians. "Capdevielle Thomas agrees:" We found ourselves a little congested, victim of the success of the biological passport. "

The "success" of the PBA in athletics is however already quite relative. First, it penalizes almost exclusively of athletes in endurance disciplines, from 1500 meters to 50 kilometers walk. Sprinters, whom blood doping provides less net benefits are almost immune. Second, it puts athletes on the same level of inequality than conventional doping tests: the smartest or best know scientifically surrounded thwart the biological passport to be used as a compass, including maintaining their blood data in acceptable limits. These are easy to monitor because each athlete can view their profile in the name of the right of access to medical data.

"Among the athletes of very high level now, I'm not sure that the results are very convincing," says Michel Rieu, a former scientific adviser to the French Agency for fight against doping. The sports stars also have significant financial resources, sometimes higher than the legal services of international federations, and are able to appeal to scientists and lawyers defending their case before the Court of Arbitration for Sport. Concerned about their reputation and their finances, some federations have become very cautious at the time of sanctioning a biological passport.

Some workarounds are known. Overhydration - Quickly drink a liter of water prior to blood collection - much disturbs the efficiency of the passport. The micro doses of EPO are virtually undetectable, as shown by a study of Australian hematologist Michael Ashenden. "I know at least six other [workarounds] that disrupt the model," suggests Pierre Sallet physiologist, a specialist in doping.

For him, the biological passport could also be used as a medical prevention tool, just like his distant cousin, the longitudinal follow. This track also would temporarily deviate from sports competitions to abnormal values, said Pierre Sallet: "We will not say if he comes to doping or something else, but there are variables that we do not understand and that for the athlete's health with this blood profile, there is a risk of taking part in the competition. It could then be excluded 15 days. "

Would the biological passport already passed? Surely in part, yes, for his part hematology. "At first, it was easy. Now, the passport must make real progress, we must not stand still, "insists Francesca Rossi, responsible for the fight against doping in cycling. A meeting of all players in the PBA was held in Doha in November 2015 to consider ways to simplify the technical and administrative process and help experts develop "doping scenarios," those they imagine are before assert that a given blood profile is evidence of a doping practice.

Scientists continue to work on a real-steroidal component, which would provide indirect evidence of the taking of endogenous steroids. The endocrine component, which aims to detect the use of growth hormone, is still at an embryonic stage. While being critical of the biological passport, Pierre Sallet summarizes its importance: "Fortunately it's there. It's like the EPO test: if he was not there, we would fall in the years 1990-2000. "
 
Jul 7, 2012
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Could it be that Bermon is just another in a long line of pragmatic doctors who see little wrong in the 'proper' medical management of doping, regarding their role as being to ensure that nothing is done that might endanger an athlete's long-term health, but who at the same time are horrified by the sort of doping abuses that place lives and health at genuine risk, and who genuinely want to see such practices controlled and stopped?
 
Jun 16, 2015
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Robert21 said:
Could it be that Bermon is just another in a long line of pragmatic doctors who see little wrong in the 'proper' medical management of doping, regarding their role as being to ensure that nothing is done that might endanger an athlete's long-term health, but who at the same time are horrified by the sort of doping abuses that place lives and health at genuine risk, and who genuinely want to see such practices controlled and stopped?

Medicine, like most things these days, is a business. I've seen more than one doctor during my misspent time in sports clinics and I've yet to meet one who carries the world's burdens on his shoulders.
 
Oct 16, 2010
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gillan1969 said:
heart_attack_man said:
I reckon he's very much all over both sides of the fence. Why wouldn't you be? It pays well.

rather like Conconi back in the day
Conconi
yorck olaf Schumacher
Damsgaard
Catlin
Bermon
Dolle
Zorzoli
Saugy
Swart
Vrijman
Jo Marx
Coyle

common denominator: conflict of interest.
 
Jun 16, 2015
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Re: Re:

sniper said:
gillan1969 said:
heart_attack_man said:
I reckon he's very much all over both sides of the fence. Why wouldn't you be? It pays well.

rather like Conconi back in the day
Conconi
yorck olaf Schumacher
Damsgaard
Catlin
Bermon
Dolle
Zorzoli
Saugy
Swart
Vrijman
Jo Marx
Coyle

common denominator: conflict of interest.

Dr Cotorro (to Nadal et al) - Spanish doping doctor, er sorry, ITF 'licensed physician for doping control'.
 
Oct 16, 2010
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Re: Re:

Zebadeedee said:
sniper said:
gillan1969 said:
heart_attack_man said:
I reckon he's very much all over both sides of the fence. Why wouldn't you be? It pays well.

rather like Conconi back in the day
Conconi
yorck olaf Schumacher
Damsgaard
Catlin
Bermon
Dolle
Zorzoli
Saugy
Swart
Vrijman
Jo Marx
Coyle

common denominator: conflict of interest.

Dr Cotorro (to Nadal et al) - Spanish doping doctor, er sorry, ITF 'licensed physician for doping control'.
nice one!
 

thehog

BANNED
Jul 27, 2009
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mrhender said:
The recent IAAF debacle got me thinking about Stéphane Bermon so I did a little searching.

It seems he no longer longer listed as member of the IAAF medical and anti-doping commission.
http://www.iaaf.org/about-iaaf/structure/commissions#iaaf-medical-anti-doping-commission

I wonder what happened to the good doctor?

Searching for his name in combination with IAAF gives a most recent result of him giving a lecture about IAAF standards in some conference for Women and health in late october.

He also seems to be a private man, I cannot find either facebook or linkedin profile, which is quite odd as one could imagine some branding would do good for someone holding high positions in sports and running a Monaco based clinic.

Perhaps his repute make no need for such trivialities.

Also found (perhaps posted before) that Froome had denied any link to Bermon other than going to him a few times for "pulmonary function tests with Dr Bermon,"

http://www.nation.co.ke/sports/othersports/Doping-suspicions-worthwhile-in-yellow-says-Chris-Froome/-/1951306/2805468/-/31i6wi/-/index.html

Which is in sharp contrast to earlier links stating him as Froome's personal doctor.
Particularly in relation to the TUE application in Romandie 2014.

It seems the correction from camp Froome came only after the media this year caught up on connection between Bermon and Vino/Astana.

Now remind me what was it CIRC report stated about Monaco?

Oh yes:

"allegations suggest that a “package” of support was offered to riders, which included tax
evasion advice, training and doping programmes, legal advice, false contracts, the
involvement of tax consultancy companies to manage secondary contracts, and money
laundering. Athletes from other sports are alleged to have been involved, and a variety of
“service levels” were offered to cater for the elite professional through to the amateur
with connections and money. Most activities are alleged to have taken place in Italy and
Switzerland (and to a more limited extent in Tenerife and Monaco)"

Now I wonder if has stepped down from IAAF duties, then why and when.
If not, then why isn't he listed on the IAAF website.

This post now trending on Twitter.
 
Sep 16, 2010
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red_flanders said:
Might you have a link? Tried a few and didn't find it. Thx.
Bermon probly had his lawyers get on to Twitter and ordered that it be removed from the trending lists. Cause, like, you now, that's a thing...