Description
Nutritional supplements (the combination of dietary supplements, sports foods, and performance-enhancing supplements) are used by many athletes for health and/or performance-related reasons. Nutritional supplements may be contaminated with illegal substances, putting the athlete at risk of adverse health outcomes or

Nutritional supplements (the combination of dietary supplements, sports foods, and performance-enhancing supplements) are used by many athletes for health and/or performance-related reasons. Nutritional supplements may be contaminated with illegal substances, putting the athlete at risk of adverse health outcomes or a positive doping test. Third-party testing programs help mitigate risk by regulating the purity and safety of supplements. However, it is unknown what percentage of high school athletes are familiar with third-party testing programs and how many athletes use such programs. This study was designed to explore high school athletes’ use of nutritional supplements, whether they were third-party tested, and their attitudes and influences toward safe(r) nutritional supplement use. An online questionnaire was developed to distribute among student-athletes from a private high school in the western US, resulting in a representative sample (n=225). Ninety-four percent (n = 211) of the student-athlete population reported using at least one nutritional supplement within the past year, reporting six different supplements on average. Sports foods were used the most (87%), followed by dietary supplements (76%), and then supplements claiming to enhance performance (58%). The most frequently reported nutritional supplements were sports drinks (72%), vitamins (65%), sports bars (60%), protein powder (58%), recovery drinks (46%), and multivitamin/mineral supplements (40%). One-fourth of student-athletes reported consistent use of third-party tested supplements. Reasons for supplement use include gaining muscle (48%), improving health (46%), improving performance (44%), and losing or gaining weight (29%). Parents (45%) had the most influence on the athlete’s purchasing of supplements, followed by friends, teammates, or other family members (40%), the physician (30%), head sports coach (26%), strength and conditioning coach (25%), and athletic trainer (24%). The sports dietitian was checked by 8% of students as influential. The biggest gap in knowledge was where to find third-party tested supplements (22% knowledgeable) and where to order third-party tested supplements (25% knowledgeable). Based on the results, high school athletes would likely benefit from increased education regarding third-party testing programs and should increase their knowledge of where to find and purchase third-party tested supplements.
Reuse Permissions
  • 5.03 MB application/pdf

    Download restricted until 2025-12-01.

    Details

    Title
    • A Cross-Sectional Exploratory Study of (Safer) Nutritional Supplement Use and Knowledge in High School Athletes
    Contributors
    Date Created
    2024
    Subjects
    Resource Type
  • Text
  • Collections this item is in
    Note
    • Partial requirement for: M.S., Arizona State University, 2024
    • Field of study: Nutrition

    Machine-readable links