Performance Enhancing Drugs
Performance Enhancing Drugs | Bibliography
Books
Charlie Francis, Speed Trap: A Track Coach’s Explosive Account of How the World’s Greatest Athletes Win. New York: St. Martin’s, 1990.
Bob Goldman, Death in the Locker Room II. Chicago: Elite Sports Medicine Publications, 1992.
John M. Hoberman, Mortal Engines: The Science of Performance and the Dehumanization of Sport. New York: The Free Press, 1992.
Barry Houlihan, Dying to Win: Doping in Sport and the Development of the Anti-Doping Policy. Strasbourg, France: Council of Europe Publishing, 1999.
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- Introduction
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Table of Contents
- Performance-Enhancing Drugs: An Overview
- Athletes Will Never Stop Using Performance- Enhancing Drugs
- Athletes Must Stop Using Performance- Enhancing Drugs
- Performance-Enhancing Drugs Tarnish Athletics
- The Ban on Performance-Enhancing Drugs Should Continue
- Teen Steroid Abuse Is a Growing Problem
- Performance-Enhancing Drugs Compromise Medical Ethics
- Performance-Enhancing Drugs Should Be Regulated, Not Prohibited
- Ban Athletes Who Don’t Use Steroids
- Coming Soon: Open Olympics!
- The Health Risks of Steroid Use Have Been Exaggerated
- One Strike, You’re Out
- Performance-Enhancing Drug Testing Is Ineffective
- Performance-Enhancing Dietary Supplements Are Dangerous
- Performance-Enhancing Dietary Supplements Are Safe
- Genetic Engineering May One Day Replace Performance- Enhancing Drugs
- Organizations to Contact
- Bibliography
- Copyright
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