The general consensus is that performance enhancing drugs should not be allowed in professional sports. Performance-enhancing drugs are against the spirit of sport, as it creates an unfair playing field. If professional athletes use drugs, it will encourage others to use performance-enhancing drugs and promotes unhealthy and dangerous behaviour. Many different performance-enhancing drugs pose severe health risks and can endanger an athlete’s life. Performance-enhancing drugs should not be allowed in professional sports.
Athletes strive to be better than their competitors by improving their performance. They are encouraged for doing so, and it is what all athletes want to do. The concern is that, the method some athletes use is unfair and unjust….
Every time a professional athlete used a performance-enhancing drug, they put themselves at risk of harming oneself. Performance-enhancing drugs have the ability to affect the body both physiologically and psychologically. Anabolic agents (steroids) are used to treat delayed puberty and increase testosterone levels. Using steroids has some potential side effects. These include: liver damage, disruption of puberty in children, stunted growth, male pattern baldness, increased aggressiveness and libido. There are three substances often used when blood doping, namely synthetic oxygen carriers, erythropoietin and blood transfusions. Blood doping have more severe health risks then steroids. They include: blood clotting (which can lead to heart attacks), increased stress on the heart and risk of strokes. There are already so many risks with just two different types of drugs, performance-enhancing drugs is not worth the first place. New drugs are constantly being developed to avoid detection in case of drug test. The risks of these drugs aren’t even known and won’t be unless there has been extensive research in it for a period of time to study the long-term effects of it. There are also often immediate side effects to taking certain…