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The part of the form that deals with menstrual cycles and had been optional. The Florida High School Athletic Association's board of directors voted to remove the questions about high school athletes' menstrual history. Clara-Sophia Daly/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images hide caption
The Florida High School Athletic Association's board of directors has voted 14-2 to remove questions about high school athletes' menstrual history from a required health form for participation in high school athletics.
Thursday's emergency meeting focused on the debate around menstrual cycle information. But in a less-discussed change to the requirements for Florida athletes, the newly adopted form asks students to list their \"sex assigned at birth.\" The previous version asked only for \"sex.\"
These are particularly fraught questions at a time when many people are worried about how their reproductive health information might be used, both because of the overturning of Roe v. Wade, and because of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' support for a law banning transgender athletes in girls' sports.
The vote comes after weeks of controversy surrounding questions on the medical form, which is typically filled out by a physician and submitted to schools. The board approved a recommendation by the association's director to remove the questions, which asked for details including the onset of an athlete's period and the date of that person's last menstrual cycle.
During the emergency meeting Thursday, the association's attorney read public comments into the record for about an hour. The comments overwhelmingly opposed requiring athletes to report those details to school athletic officials, citing privacy concerns.
Contributors: Christine Rosenbloom, PhD, RDN, CSSD and Sarah Klemm, RDN, CD, LDNPublished: September 14, 2021Reviewed: August 23, 2021Jupiterimages/Stockbyte/Thinkstock Fall is a great season for stop-and-go sports such as soccer, football and basketball. Your teen athlete needs power for quick, strong moves and endurance for practices and games. But how do you make sure that your active teen gets the necessary nutrients to fuel both Here are four nutrition tips to keep in mind.
You wouldn't put cheap gas in a luxury car, so why put calories from unhealthy fats and added sugars in your teen athlete's body Individual calorie needs vary depending on age, sex, type and amount of activity, as well as other factors. Because young athletes are still growing, their food intake needs to include enough calories to fuel their activity level and to support growth and development.
On average, active teenage boys need 3,000 to 4,000 calories a day, while teenage girls who are active may need 2,400 to 3,000 calories daily. Choose quality calories from fruits, vegetables, whole-grain breads and cereals, low-fat dairy, lean protein foods and heart-healthy fats. These foods provide the nutrients athletes need.
For individualized nutrition guidance for young athletes, consult a registered dietitian nutritionist who specializes in sports nutrition. To find a dietitian in your area, search the Academy's Find a Nutrition Expert database.
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Percent (%) total femoral bone, quadriceps muscle and subcutaneous fat cross-sectional area change in adolescent and mature volleyball athletes: bar graph showing mean change and 95% confidence interval in females vs. males.
A significant increase in muscle size occurred over 2 years in young male athletes only. This extends previous findings reporting that, from 16 years of age, athletic males become significantly stronger[36] and continue to display greater increases in muscle strength during their final teenage years as opposed to their female counterparts[8]. However, when normalized to bone size, no significant increase in muscle was observed, reflecting the tight association between bone and muscle growth. The greater muscle and bone changes from 16 years of age in males compared with females likely reflect hormonal differences that lead to a later onset of puberty in males, with abundant levels of testosterone driving bone and muscle growth[37]. The approximately three times greater increase over 2 years in body height and weight in adolescent males compared to adolescent females supports this notion of continued linear growth in adolescent males during the follow-up period. Nevertheless, previous thigh CSA data comparing 16-18 year old jumping athletes to non-athletic controls shows that adolescent athletes have 10-20% greater quadriceps CSA than controls[20], suggesting that the increases in muscle CSA we observed in adolescent athletes may also be observed independent of growth.
Significant longitudinal SCF changes occurred in both adolescent and mature athletic women, but not in men. These results, combined with the significant increases in muscle and bone observed in adolescent males only, suggest some sex-specific patterns of change in bone, muscle and adipose tissue, despite examining men and women with very high levels of physical activity. Previous research suggests that healthy women tend to increase SCF with increasing age even in the presence of stable weight[40,43]. Although we evaluated SCF in an anatomical location where women, more so than men, deposit adiposity, results of the current study reveal that increases in SCF occur even in highly active athletes, likely reflecting a crucial role that the SCF appears to play in metabolic homeostasis in women[44]. Despite increases in SCF in young and mature female athletes, no increase in IMF was observed in any group. These findings are inconsistent with data from older women (>50 years of age), where 2-year change in IMF CSA was observed and related to aging[33]. Maintaining physical activity may thus prevent IMF deposits, and in turn potentially prevent detrimental implications of IMF on physical function and performance[17,18].
The lack of correlation of longitudinal change in adipose tissue with that in bone in adolescent males and females, and in mature men, contrasts with the relatively high correlations in longitudinal growth of muscle and bone. These findings appear to suggest that, in terms of bone apposition and growth, there is a tighter relationship between muscle and bone than between adipose tissue and bone in physically highly active subjects, with the potential exception of mature women. It is also important to note that no correlation between muscle and bone growth was observed in adolescent female athletes. That the adolescent females gained the most SCF, which trended strongly towards being correlated with less muscle growth (Table 5), may partly explain the only lack of relationship observed between muscle and bone growth (i.e., due to the mediating influence of increased SCF). Nevertheless, the coupling of muscle and bone change in mature athletes extends previous findings of muscle forces being a strong determinant of bone structure during peak musculoskeletal growth[1,22], by providing evidence of a muscle-bone unit many years after peak growth has ceased. The weak relationship between adipose tissue and bone may be due to the relatively small amounts of body fat observed in the highly active athletes, despite a significant longitudinal SCF increase in adolescent and mature women, or may indicate that leptin and other adipokines influence trabecular bone density and mineral content more so than cortical bone mass and diaphyseal bone size.
In an age of sports hero idolatry, it is essential to understand the relationship between male athletes and violence against women. Reports of well-known athletes, both professional and intercollegiate, who have been charged with crimes involving violence against women are prevalent in the media. Are these athletes more likely to gain the spotlight because of their status as star athletes Or do their lifestyles make athletes more likely to engage in sexual assault, battering, or other forms of violence against women than nonathletes Athletes and Acquaintance Rape unravels the controversy of this topic by focusing on three high-profile cases involving professional athletes who have been charged with sexual assault. Jeffrey R. Benedict provides a brief history on each athlete and traces the chronology of events leading up to the charges of sexual assault and the results of those charges. By examining specific aspects of the collegiate and professional athleteæs life, Benedict reveals a climate predisposed to committing violence against women that provides star athletes with protection from punishment and conviction. Intriguing and thought-provoking, Athletes and Acquaintance Rape will prove useful for academics, practitioners, and students in several fields, including sociology, psychology, gender studies, law, sport management, educational administration, violence against women, and family violence. Written in an engaging style, the general reader will also find this book accessible and enlightening.
After dropping out of college and being passed over by NBA teams in the 1992 college draft, Marcus Webb earned the last spot on the Boston Celtics roster during a summer tryout. Despite being the lowest paid player on the team, he nonetheless wore the famous Celtics uniform and played alongside Larry Bird and other famous players. Webb immediately immersed