Submitted by: Submitted by tihildre
Views: 74
Words: 1521
Pages: 7
Category: Other Topics
Date Submitted: 08/21/2014 09:51 AM
Becoming the best athlete you can be takes a lot of hard work and heart. Many people see that there are easy ways out and they take that path. Striving to have a perfect body is like a social event in the new millennium Steroids is one of the easiest ways to enhance your body to the next level in a short amount of time. The use of steroids has weakened many people and has brought tension towards the legal system. The legalizing of anabolic steroids is very controversial. The main source for the use of steroids is said to be athletes, but there have been many other cases concerning the use of steroids. Many athletes believe that steroids improve athletic performance and provide them with an advantage over others. On the other hand, the medical and scientific societies believe that deficient scientific data exist to support the claim that anabolic steroids can improve athletic performance. However, astounding scientific data demonstrates their destructive effects. Therefore, a large information and credibility gap regarding anabolic steroids exists between athletes and medical and scientific societies. Researchers believe that this gap can be closed if both groups are better informed about anabolic steroids. Closing the gap brings more dignifying results towards the use of steroids. Legalizing anabolic steroids use will cause many health problems and will destroy bodies of great role models and the ones to come.
Anabolic steroids have been around for the past 5 centuries. It originally comes from the male hormone taken in order to increase your weight and growth. The drug is illicit and has caused many problems for the past few years. Twenty years after policy makers passed the Anabolic Steroid Control Act of 1990, adding steroids to the list of Schedule III Controlled Substances in the United States, illicit use of the drugs continues among both adolescents and adults in American society (Denham 4). The control act was passed to regulate the use of the drug and...