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A study scheduled to be
released Wednesday and obtained by USA TODAY reports that 13 of the 52
supplements (25%) purchased at various U.S. retailers contained small amounts
of steroids and six (11.5%) had banned stimulants.
The study was overseen
by Informed-Choice, a non-profit coalition of dietary supplements. Testing was
conducted by HFL, a lab approved by the World Anti-Doping Agency and located in
England.
"We were very
surprised by these results," said Dave Hall, CEO of HFL.
A study by the
International Olympic Committee conducted from 2000 to 2002 showed 18.8% of the
240 supplements purchased in the USA contained steroids.
Officials from
Informed-Choice and HFL declined to Reveal which supplements were tested or
where they were purchased, but Hall said some of best-selling brands were
randomly selected, mostly from mall-based stores.
"We didn't go after
products that appeared to be dubious," Hall said. "We wanted to test
products that were standard and mainstream, something a high school kid would
be attracted to."
John Barnes, the
football coach at Los Alamitos (Calif.) High, was alarmed at the results.
"It's not good if a
kid can find these things in a health-food store," he said. "As a
father and a coach, you think anything they'd find there would be perfectly
fine, and then you find out that it's banned. This is something I'm going to
start talking to my players about right away."
Of the 10 categories of
supplements tested, testosterone boosters were flagged the most often. Six of
the nine boosters contained androstenedione, a steroid precursor used by Mark
McGwire en route to setting the single-season home run mark in 1998.
Andro was made illegal
nearly three years ago.
Kelly Hoffman, executive
director of Informed-Choice, said most banned substances are finding their way
into products inadvertently - for instance, when manufacturers fail to properly
clean equipment. She said raw materials imported from Asia, India and Eastern
Europe also can be contaminated.
The Food and Drug
Administration is taking on a more active role in policing supplements,
including taking reports of adverse effects of the products starting Dec. 22.
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