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Decisional trade-offs towards doping and their association with moral attitudes and health risk perceptions: A mixed methods study

journal contribution
posted on 2024-12-18, 11:07 authored by Lambros LazourasLambros Lazouras, Dara MojtahediDara Mojtahedi, Mathew Hillier, Michael Petrou
<p> The objective of the present research was to examine doping-related decisional trade-offs, and their relationship with health risk perceptions towards doping and moral attitudes in sport. A mixed methods sequential-explanatory design was used. In Study 1,249, Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) athletes from 16 countries completed anonymous online questionnaires on decisional trade-offs related to doping, health risk beliefs towards doping, moral attitudes in sport, and socio-demographic variables. The results showed that almost 1 in 10 athletes would trade their life for sporting success, independently of the moral implications of their choice. When mortal threat was absent, 31.5% of the athletes would trade morality for sporting success. Decisional trade-off choices differentiated scores in moral attitudes, such as acceptance of cheating and keeping winning in proportion. In Study 2, 11 British competitive MMA athletes were interviewed about decisional trade-offs involving moral violations or mortal threats. Thematic analysis corroborated the Study 1 findings, with most athletes dismissing the doping choice involving a mortal threat but endorsing the one where the mortal threat was absent. Anti-doping education in MMA athletes should target the decision-making process underlying doping, with an emphasis on moral values and the adverse health risk effects of doping. </p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Sport and Exercise Science (Research Outputs)
  • School of Psychology (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Decisional trade-offs towards doping and their association with moral attitudes and health risk perceptions: A mixed methods study

Volume

42

Issue

8

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

ISSN

0264-0414

eISSN

1466-447X

Date Submitted

2024-01-10

Date Accepted

2024-05-15

Date of First Publication

2024-06-06

Date of Final Publication

2024-06-06

Open Access Status

  • Not Open Access

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