Predicting attitude towards performance enhancing substance use: A comprehensive test of the Sport Drug Control Model with elite Australian athletes
Objectives: This study presents a comprehensive examination of the Sport Drug Control Model via survey data of elite Australian athletes.
Design: A cross-sectional nationwide mail survey.
Methods: A mail survey of 1237 elite Australian athletes was conducted. Structural equation modelling was employed to test the model.
Results: Morality (personal moral stance on performance-enhancing substances use), reference group opinion (perceived moral stance of reference group on performance-enhancing substances use) and legitimacy (perceptions of the drug testing and appeals processes) evidenced significant relationships with attitude towards performance-enhancing substances use, which in turn was positively associated with doping behaviour. The model accounted for 81% and 13% of the variance in attitude towards performance-enhancing substances use and doping behaviour, respectively.
Conclusions: These findings validate the usefulness of the Sport Drug Control Model for understanding influences on performance-enhancing substances use. Nevertheless, there is a need to survey athletes representing a broader range of competition levels and cross-cultural research to test the model's applicability to other populations of athletes.
© Copyright 2014 Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport. Elsevier. All rights reserved.
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| Notations: | biological and medical sciences |
| Published in: | Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
2014
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| Online Access: | http://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsams.2013.10.249 |
| Volume: | 17 |
| Issue: | 6 |
| Pages: | 574-579 |
| Document types: | article |
| Level: | advanced |