Steroids Case Study

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When Sheila Berez was given a prescription for corticosteroid drops to treat her three-year-old daughter’s eye inflammation, she had panicked. With so much stigma and negativism around steroids, the 35-year-old mother was concerned that such drops will increase the toddler’s androgyny.
What are steroids? Developed in the 1930’s, these are anabolic steroids, which were initially prescribed by doctors to prevent the atrophy or break down of muscle in patients with debilitating illnesses. They are a synthetic version of the male hormone, testosterone; they are biological derivatives of testosterone and dihydrotestosterone that interact with androgen receptors to increase muscle and bone synthesis.
They were given to males with abnormal hormonal levels or to induce puberty. Males born with hormonal deficiencies were given shots of anabolic-androgen steroids to help them live semi-normal lives. Even today, steroids are prescribed to help bone growth, development and the loss of appetite. Bodybuilders and athletes often use steroids to build muscles and improve their athletic performance, but as with all good things, moderation is compulsory.
Medical guidance body NICE believes that 59,000 people took steroids last year while social care charity CRI has seen a massive 645 per cent rise in the number of steroid users between 2010 and 2013. But as the number of steroid users has increased, the average age of those users has fallen. According to a research done by the Centre for Substance Abuse Research (CESAR), in the last few years an increased number of teenagers, as young as fourteen, have used anabolic steroids to speed up the process of achieving a muscular body. This keeps them preoccupied with an image that they feel they need to ...

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...ess on exposing the perverse parsing of medical treatments and more on a simple indisputable notion.
Professional sports have evolved so much over the years that regardless of the rules, athletes, especially in sports such as hockey and football where they take a tremendous amount of physical punishment, will continue to cut corners by taking steroids. If these athletes are allowed to use steroids under professional care, their use would help them prevent injuries by making their bodies stronger but if they are legalised, it would be almost impossible to keep them out of the hands of young players and normal teenagers. Athletes are endangering not only their own health, but also indirectly encouraging youngsters to do the same. The illegal steroid industry is perpetually a step ahead of the drug testing techniques and the drug misuse continues in shady settings.

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