ABSTRACT

Health and Elite Sport is the first book to critically examine the relationship between participation in high performance sport and health outcomes. Drawing on theory and empirical data from a wide range of disciplines, including sociology, developmental psychology, epidemiology, and physical education, the book explores the benefits and detriments of participation in elite sport for both individuals (athletes, coaches, spectators) and communities.

Written by a team of leading international sport researchers, the book examines key issues including:

  • Talent identification and young athletes
  • Abuse in sport
  • Positive youth development through sport
  • Athlete health in periods of transition
  • Health, sport and the family
  • Health in professional sport
  • The Olympics, Paralympics and public health
  • Long term effects of participation in elite sport

Highlighting the connections and contradictions between high performance sport and health, the book also discusses the clear and important implications for our socio-cultural, political and developmental understanding of sport. Health and Elite Sport is fascinating and important reading for all students and researchers with an interest in youth sport, sports development, sport policy, sports coaching, exercise and health, physical education, the sociology of sport, or the sociology of health.

chapter |12 pages

Sport and health of the high performance athlete

An introduction to the text

part |67 pages

Health and the developing elite athlete

chapter |18 pages

Personal development and performance?

Exploring positive youth development in elite sport contexts

chapter |19 pages

Talent identification and development

The impact on athlete health?

part |64 pages

Elite sport participation over the lifecourse

chapter |16 pages

In the name of performance

Threats, belittlement, and degradation

chapter |14 pages

Sport and longevity

Does being an elite athlete result in longer life?

chapter |15 pages

An early grave or the fountain of youth

Sport and the malleability of chronological age

part |56 pages

From self to society

chapter |14 pages

‘To thine own self be true'

Sports work, mental illness and the problem of authenticity

chapter |13 pages

Re-imagining the urban citizen

Leveraging physical cultural legacies