https://www.dukebasketballreport.co...estioned-stimulants-football-players-adhd-add
Don’t know how reliable this is, but if turns out to be accurate, then Wow!!
Don’t know how reliable this is, but if turns out to be accurate, then Wow!!
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https://www.dukebasketballreport.co...estioned-stimulants-football-players-adhd-add
Don’t know how reliable this is, but if turns out to be accurate, then Wow!!
I could never be as eloquent as Sky, but I agree that (a) there's lots of dirt over there; and (b) nothing will ever come of it. Better watch out Georgia Tech, more sanctions could be coming your way!
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.ta...esearch-concussions-ted-tatos-bluedeviliciousTheir response: https://www.tarheelblog.com/2019/10...esearch-concussions-ted-tatos-bluedevilicious
They make some good points about the accusers having reason to dislike UNC, but they don’t even address the numbers. Care to offer an explanation for the prescriptions?
OK that addresses the concussion research part of this, any feelings on the overprescription of stimulants to athletes? Look I'm sure UNC isn't the ony school to do it, but that doesn't make it OK.https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.ta...esearch-concussions-ted-tatos-bluedevilicious
The concussion community across the nation game out and thoroughly crushed this story
I can’t offer a professional opinion because I’m not a HC professional, nor do I have access to all the data even if I was. My latter point is what I believe to be problematic from this research. It is my understanding that the data was cherry picked and did not account for all the athletes. But the problem is you can’t conclude these kids are overprescribed because 1). You don’t have any other kids or athletes to compare it to and 2). You don’t have access to their medical informationOK that addresses the concussion research part of this, any feelings on the overprescription of stimulants to athletes? Look I'm sure UNC isn't the ony school to do it, but that doesn't make it OK.
70% is the proportion of UNC football freshmen prescribed stimulants for ADHD in 2010. That is way too high no matter what pool we’re talking about and who we’re comparing it to. I doubt that trend has changed much in the last decade. College sports teams will exploit any advantage if there’s no one looking. That can’t be good for heart health.I can’t offer a professional opinion because I’m not a HC professional, nor do I have access to all the data even if I was. My latter point is what I believe to be problematic from this research. It is my understanding that the data was cherry picked and did not account for all the athletes. But the problem is you can’t conclude these kids are overprescribed because 1). You don’t have any other kids or athletes to compare it to and 2). You don’t have access to their medical information
This would be a huge story if it was credible, but the study was only carried by one journal that just came to fruition 6 months ago.
70% is the proportion of UNC football freshmen prescribed stimulants for ADHD in 2010. That is way too high no matter what pool we’re talking about and who we’re comparing it to. I doubt that trend has changed much in the last decade. College sports teams will exploit any advantage if there’s no one looking. That can’t be good for heart health.
70% is the proportion of UNC football freshmen prescribed stimulants for ADHD in 2010. That is way too high no matter what pool we’re talking about and who we’re comparing it to. I doubt that trend has changed much in the last decade. College sports teams will exploit any advantage if there’s no one looking. That can’t be good for heart health.
Thanks for the info. I wish we just knew the truth of the matter.Below is one of the reasons Tatos is getting ripped and no credible journal is publishing his study. The percentages listed did not include all athletes, rather some athletes (See bolder). You can’t choose to look at 180 athletes over an 8 year period and apply their results to the entire student athlete as a whole. 180 football players over 8 years would probably be less than 10% of all players.
Also, they are mixing ADD and Learning Disabilities together. I would surmise that many athletes probably have a learning disability. They cite the NCAA as stating the norm for ADHD is 7-8% yet note the subjects tested showed ADHD AND/OR LD. Hell, I have my MBA, but I am also ADHD (diagnosed) and suffer from a slight Math LD.
Lastly, I think (not positive) there was some speculation as to the authenticity of these diagnoses. I’d have to dig deeper.
“In one email from 2007, for example, neuropsychiatrist Thomas Gualtieri, hired by the school as an outside contractor, revealed that among a group that included incoming football players from the previous two years and women’s basketball players from the previous year, 61 percent “had either ADD or a learning disability (or both), and the large majority were previously undiagnosed.”
A paper co-authored by the NCAA’s chief medical officer, Brian Hainline, and published this year says “the prevalence of ADHD in student-athletes and elite athletes may be 7 percent – 8 percent.”
Based on the UNC documents, generally only scholarship athletes were eligible for learning disability testing. And an internal review found that among about 180 UNC athletes tested between 2004 and 2012 – including 137 scholarship football players – there was a “39 percent incidence of LD and or ADHD.”
I don’t have enough knowledge of the UNC situation to make any meaningful insight. Kids very well could have been abusing Amphetamines (drugs used to treat ADHD) but I’m hoping it’s not the case. I was just pointing out that Tatos’ study was severely flawed and the entire scientific community collectively crushed him for it.Thanks for the info. I wish we just knew the truth of the matter.
All rivalry stuff aside, it is not necessary to label any decent sized chunk of society as “learning disabled” or as having a “deficit.” If 15% of any population is lacking focus and has trouble reading, then that’s not a disability at all. That’s just on the scale of natural variation. ADHD in many cases is just a deeply engrained pattern of behavior that makes certain tasks difficult. I have trouble reading for more than 5 minutes, but I refuse to hide behind this common problem and look for drugs. My inclination is that kids are increasingly overstimulated and over-controlled.
Obviously these drugs help some kids get over real learning hurdles. The way I see it used at my college is keep using it to pull all nighters without falling asleep. The “learning” they do is memorization and is not retained.
As a coach, there is an obvious reason you’d want your football players taking legal stimulants. I don’t think human beings should take these non-natural substances so lightly.
Good to see you again!For all of those “experts” who back unc , I didn’t see any of ‘em question what actually happened. unc had athletes tested for LD/ADHD. Many were sent to a clinic where Fats Thomas’ ( remember him? ) girlfriend ( Catinia Farrington ) worked. She worked as a psychometrist but was denied a license in NC. Anyway , players were encouraged to fail the tests thus making them eligible for academic assistance not available to other students...and only SCHOLARSHIP players were made available for testing. I wouldn’t pretend to argue the numbers one way or the other. But the fact remains: unc attached fraudulent diagnosis for the sole purpose of academic & athletic eligibility. All the supporting experts in the world can’t change that. Is what it is.
For all of those “experts” who back unc , I didn’t see any of ‘em question what actually happened. unc had athletes tested for LD/ADHD. Many were sent to a clinic where Fats Thomas’ ( remember him? ) girlfriend ( Catinia Farrington ) worked. She worked as a psychometrist but was denied a license in NC. Anyway , players were encouraged to fail the tests thus making them eligible for academic assistance not available to other students...and only SCHOLARSHIP players were made available for testing. I wouldn’t pretend to argue the numbers one way or the other. But the fact remains: unc attached fraudulent diagnosis for the sole purpose of academic & athletic eligibility. All the supporting experts in the world can’t change that. Is what it is.
One other thing...I find it interesting that these athletes weren’t diagnosed UNTIL they got to unc. What? They all lived the first 17 & 18 years of their lives & none had any idea whatsoever they were LD/ADHD?!?!? That strains credulity and is another reason why unc would prefer to pull out graphs & charts as they trot out “experts” rebuking Tatos’ info. If unc fraudulently diagnosed even ONE athlete ( And it was more than one. A lot more! ) it was too many.
I haven’t perused this thread completely so if this has been posted , my bad. Anyway , Tatos responds...
https://www.academia.edu/40654165/Tatos_Response_to_UNC_TBI_Center_Criticism
Again , I’m not arguing the research from EITHER side. All I’m doing is stating what unc did. It’s not opinion , it’s not speculation , it’s fact. Do other schools do it? Does Duke? I don’t know. But I damn-sure know one that did.
I’m not sure what else you want me to say besides what I posted above.Ticket2ride? Whatcha got??
I’m not sure what else you want me to say besides what I posted above.
Tatos spent years trying to take down UNC via Twitter, even going after Jay Bilas. After the NCAA ruled in their favor, he spent 3 years researching his latest publication. Said publication was thoroughly denounced by the scientific community. He comes across as desperate and deranged in his obsession of all things UNC. If there was something there, the Dane Kane’s of the world would be running with it.
I’m not sure what else you want me to say besides what I posted above.
Tatos spent years trying to take down UNC via Twitter, even going after Jay Bilas. After the NCAA ruled in their favor, he spent 3 years researching his latest publication. Said publication was thoroughly denounced by the scientific community. He comes across as desperate and deranged in his obsession of all things UNC. If there was something there, the Dane Kane’s of the world would be running with it.
I’m not saying there isn’t anything wrong here. I’m just saying no one has provided any proof thus far.I hate to pile on you, Ticket, but I find it quite humorous that you use a semi-validation of Dane Kane to throw shade on Tatos. I mean, it seems to suggest that if it was legit then Kane would be on top of it...like he was on the original scandal.
OFC
imagine thinking a pill that dehydrates your body and ruins your appetite would give you an unfair advantage playing a sport like football. LOL. there were NFL players that would take it during training camp to allow them to stay awake and focused during meetings in training camp, but acting like its a performance enhancing drug is completely erroneous