Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Huge Mental Health Care Effort For Olympic Athletes Begins
鈥淭he walls are coming down,鈥 Dr. Jess Bartley, the USOPC鈥檚 senior director of psychological services said. 鈥淢ore and more athletes are talking about it.鈥 (Sherrington, 7/22)
As more athletes have been open about mental health struggles, the USOPC has expanded its offerings to address more than just the physical. (Auerbach, 7/25)
Kweku Smith, PhD, will make his Olympic debut in the City of Light less than a year after joining the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee as a psychological services provider. Smith says he and his colleagues will be on call 24/7 throughout the Olympics and Paralympics, ready to tend to athletes鈥 mental health whether they鈥檙e in crisis or just need to bend an ear. Athletes are also free to schedule an appointment with a psychologist, or flag one down in the Olympic Village or the arena where they鈥檙e competing. (Leake, 7/25)
More health news from the Paris Olympics 鈥
Like any mass gathering event, there is a raised risk of public health threats. So how does the International Olympic Committee (IOC) mitigate these dangers鈥攂oth before and during the competitions? In this Q&A, adapted from the July 24 episode of Public Health On Call,聽Lucia Mullin, MPH, an associate scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and an associate in the Department of聽Environmental Health and Engineering, talks with Lindsay Smith Rogers about her role as a member of the WHO Collaborating Center for Global Health Security's mass gathering expert group, the inner workings of preventative public health measures during the Olympics, and insights gained from previous Games. (7/24)
Global regulators hinted at sanctioning America鈥檚 drug-fighting watchdog, a suggestion that further ratchets up tensions between those in charge of keeping sports clean. (Pells, 7/25)
At the Paris Olympics over the next three weeks, thousands of athletes will compete to win medals and stand on podiums. A select handful will be striving for something even greater. The Olympics are not only a spectacle for determining the world鈥檚 best athletes. They are a quadrennial window into the limits of human performance. (Kilgore and Giambalvo, 7/26)
Philipp W眉rz, head of food at the 2024 Paris Olympics, told The Guardian that 鈥淔rench organizers were keen to raise standards after he read that 20% of athletes鈥 meals during the London Olympics were consumed at McDonald鈥檚.鈥 Legendary track athlete Usain Bolt famously said that he ate 1,000 nuggets over 10 days during the 2008 Games, when he won two gold medals for individual sprints, per The Guardian. (7/25)
To complete at the Olympic level in Paris this year, athletes surely need a good night's rest 鈥 but that doesn't seem to be the case for some athletes sleeping on the viral cardboard beds in the Olympic village.聽The beds, which many have joked are "anti-sex" beds due to the materials used, have actually proven to be quite sturdy 鈥 almost too sturdy ... Unfavorable conditions could impact an athlete's sleep, recovery and performance, Dr. Carlos M. Nunez, sleep expert and chief medical officer at medical device company ResMed, told CBS News. (Moniuszko, 7/25)
If you thought the Olympics was the culmination of four years of blood, sweat and tears, we regret to inform you that La D茅fense Arena in Paris will be overflowing with a different bodily fluid. It turns out that every athlete who takes a plunge into the Olympic pool will probably relieve themselves in there, too. (Higgins, 7/26)
This year, Olympic Village director Laurent Michaud told Sky News that there are a whopping 300,000 condoms available for the 10,500 athletes competing at the 2024 Paris Games (that's almost 29 condoms per athlete, mind you). "It is important that the conviviality here is something big," Michaud said. Over email, a Paris 2024 spokesperson confirmed to PS that there will be 200,000 male condoms, 10,000 male condoms without latex, 20,000 female condoms, and 10,000 oral dams 鈥 all of which are accompanied with a lubricant pouch 鈥 available in the Village. (Gulino, 7/23)
Also 鈥
To let him represent the Netherlands at the Paris Games, the Dutch Olympic Committee agreed that Steven van de Velde should stay outside the athletes鈥 village and not talk with media, who would certainly ask about his prison sentence for raping a 12-year-old girl when he was 19. The Dutch Olympic Committee and Dutch Volleyball Federation declined to make Van de Velde available and to comment to The Athletic beyond a statement that said in part that Van de Velde was included on the team 鈥渁fter careful consideration鈥 and that he had 鈥渃onsistently met鈥 their high standards.聽 (Burrows, 7/25)
After the tip of his ring finger was mangled in a practice match two weeks ago, Matthew Dawson chose amputation over a long, uncertain recovery. (Zhuang and Yoon, 7/25)