Dear Wiggo said:
Been shown to be the opposite, in fact.
That seems very odd

, I don't believe it, but knowing you I'll be swamped with a dozen articles, and I have not got the time to look into that.
blackcat said:
dr michael ashenden did some experiments in real world conditions on the biopassport. specifically, triggering the blood doping threshold/positive.
he found that this was not the panacea it is held out to be, because his results did not demonstrate athletes who were taking epo.
Yes I haven't gone into the details of his experiment. I think I only read the abstract. The problem is that there is fear involved in real life, and the consequences of a mistake in the experiment for the participant is 0, and I don't think everyone avoided detection by the epo test. The risk is still there, meaning someone would need to be willing to risk all to see if this procedure worked or not. And it might work for some time, but AD procedures are evolving, and the BP is only one part of the picture.
But that the BP alone could not detect doping with his regime is something I find plausible, but the BP evolves, and if it is used in conjunction with other information, it could cause problems for the determined doper. The Ashenden program might have worked for a doper last year, but this year, and the next? That's a risky determination to make.
Sorry if my thoughts are unclear, I'm just following the demos in Istanbul, and laugh every time new Turkish restriction on the sale of alcohol is mentioned as a sign of Islamism(In Norway, its much stricter

).