Presentation
at the Gene Doping Symposium in St. Petersburg, Russia.
That bothers Arne Ljungqvist, the world agency's health, medical, and research committee chairman, who doles out several million dollars in grant money every year to research groups looking
at gene doping and its detection.
Not exact matches
AAAS and the World Anti-
Doping Agency (WADA), an international organization that provides comprehensive anti-
doping monitoring and educational resources
at Olympic and Paralympic Games, co-sponsored a symposium in June 2008 in St. Petersburg, Russia to discuss
gene doping in sport.
With no viable testing mechanism on the horizon, it is possible that
at least one of the 10,000 - plus Olympic competitors in Beijing this summer will have experimented with
gene doping.
With no viable testing mechanism on the horizon, the possibility remains that
at least one of the 10,000 - plus Olympic competitors in Athens this summer will have experimented with
gene doping.
The article noted that Andy Miah,
at the University of the West of Scotland, in contrast to Olivier Rabin and Theodore Friedmann, the experts (whose study was just published in the journal Science) quoted in the article, suggests that
gene doping may be safer than current methods of enhancing performance.