First, to place the current paediatric literature into context it is necessary to briefly summarise the adult literature. A major area of the adult research literature regarding athlete supplement use focuses on athletes at the university or college level, thus involving athletes over the age of 18 and adult athletes (Froiland et al., 2004; Kristiansen et al., 2005; Sobal and Marquart, 1994a). A study involving athletes attending a US Division I university revealed that 89% of the subjects had used supplements or were using supplements at the time the study took place (Froiland et al., 2004). Another study involving US NCAA Division I university student athletes found that 88% of respondents consumed at least one nutritional supplement and 58% used two or more supplements (Burns et al., 2004). Additionally, Canadian varsity athletes (94.3%) have been found to use one or more supplements at least once per month (Kristiansen et al., 2005). Supplement use among elite athletes is well documented, as a high percentage of Canadian Olympic athletes were found to consume dietary supplements at the Atlanta (69%) and Sydney (74%) Olympic Games (Huang et al., 2006), 77% Singaporean elite athletes reported consuming dietary supplements (Slater et al., 2003), and a high prevalence of supplement use was found among competitive athletes (53%) in the United Kingdom (Airstone et al., 2005). The population reported to most frequently engage in supplementation is elite athletes who compete at national, international, and Olympic levels (Sobal and Marquart, 1994a). For example, Erdman et al., 2006 found that 88.4% of Canadian elite athletes competing at the provincial, varsity, national, North American, and international/professional levels reported taking one or more dietary supplements. All levels of athletes engaged in supplement use more frequently during the training phase, however athletes competing at the international/professional level reported using supplements most frequently during both training (98.3%) and competition (87.1%) while provincial-level athletes used supplements least frequently during both training (89.6%) and competition (73.6%) (Erdman et al., 2006). Prevalence of supplement use among young athletes is not as clearly documented as the adult and elite athlete literature. There are a limited number of recent studies conducted in the 1990’s and 2000’s investigating supplement use by child and adolescent athletes though the same issues also appear to be pertinent to this younger age group. Investigating this particular population is important as studies show that supplement uses amongst the child and adolescent athlete population is widespread (see Table 1). Sample sizes used in the reviewed studies varied substantially from 32 to 1,355 and the prevalence of supplement use among child and adolescent athletes ranged from 22.3% to 71% (Table 1). With the exception of the Scofield and Unruh, 2006 study, the larger studies found a lower prevalence rate than the studies with the smaller sample sizes. This substantial difference could be the result of the inconsistent methodologies of the studies thus implying that the prevalence rate may not be as high as anticipated. Two studies (O'Dea, 2003; Bell et al., 2004) did not look at the overall prevalence of supplement use and instead focused only on the use of individual supplements, thus narrowing still the amount of available data on overall prevalence rates of supplementation practices in young athletes. Variation also occurred among the ages of the participants included in the studies. Although the focus was on ‘young’ athletes, five studies examined a range of ages (Kim and Keen, 1999; O'Dea, 2003; Scofield and Unruh, 2006; Sobal and Marquart, 1994a) while two studies focused only on a single age (Nieper, 2005; Ziegler et al., 2003). Studies also differed in the actual ages included in the studies; one included subjects as young as 11years (O'Dea, 2003), others included athletes aged 19 years, and another investigated high school athletes, reporting grade levels but not actual ages (Sobal and Marquart, 1994b) (Table 1). A few recent studies of elite athletes have included young athletes in the population sample, however with the exception of Slater et al., 2003, the ages included in the studies did not distinguish between the age groups thus it was not possible to determine the prevalence of supplement use by the young athletes in the sample. Slater et al., 2003, on the other hand, found that 77% of respondents used dietary supplements within the year previous to the study, however, no difference was found in relation to age and 53.8% of respondents were under the age of 20 (Slater et al., 2003). Such a variance in age could affect the results, as the older athletes may have more access to supplements and may be more exposed to supplement use. Dietary intakes of younger athletes are most likely to be monitored by a parents or guardian and therefore they would have less freedom to engage in supplement use compared to older athletes who would have more opportunity to engage in unsupervised supplement use. The older adolescent athletes may be pressured by their peers and team mates to use supplements, and would have easier access to supplements than their younger counterparts. On the other hand, one study found that young athletes reported taking supplement because their mothers gave them to them (O'Dea, 2003) thus suggesting that younger athletes might have little control over their supplement intake. The level of competition the subjects engaged in differed and thus could have had an effect on the prevalence of supplement use. Five studies (Kim and Keen, 1999; Metzl et al., 2001; O'Dea, 2003; Scofield and Unruh, 2006; Sobal and Marquart, 1994b) investigated supplement use among high school athletes, one study (Bell et al., 2004) focused on students enrolled in health and wellness classes, and two studies (Nieper, 2005; Ziegler, et al., 2003) focused on elite-level athletes. Some studies covered a wide scope of sports, especially those focusing on high school athletes, where others examined athletes of particular sports, such as track and field (Nieper, 2005) and figure skating (Ziegler et al., 2003). There is also diversity in the type of sport, which the various participants were engaged in. Athletes involved in multisports (2 or more sports) tend to engage in supplement use more frequently than athletes involved in a single sport (Scofield and Unruh, 2006). Two studies included athletes from only specific sports (Ziegler et al., 2003; Nieper, 2005), while others explored supplement use across a range of sports. Supplement use among particular sports, mainly those requiring athletes to ‘make weight’ or the more aesthetic sports is also more prevalent. Sobal and Marquart, 1994b found that wrestlers (59%) were more likely to use supplements than others such as softball, hockey, and golf players (each 50%) with gymnasts not far behind (40%). Also, most studies used questionnaires to investigate supplement use, however, one study (O'Dea, 2003) used focus groups and another study (Ziegler et al., 2003) used anthropometric measures and food records, as well as questionnaires. |