Showing posts with label accredited laboratories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label accredited laboratories. Show all posts

Wednesday, 25 November 2009

Another Perspective on 2008 WADA Laboratory Statistics

When the Honourable John Fahey presided, last November 2008, as Chair of the WADA Executive Committee, his remarks included two important concepts.

First, as to the problem or situation of full Signatory 'compliance', that WADA had “... certainly watered down the black and white approach that many believed should have been taken...”, and secondly, how results achieved via the various Floyd Landis cases proved “... that the system was there and worked properly...”. Our Ww list (of 'Landis Decisions') includes USADA I, USADA/WADA II, AFLD and the settled US Fed. Court case, not to mention the 'Hacking' case still waltzing through the French court system (although Mr Fahey may not have been counting beyond the three US-based cases). Of course, the 'system' to which Mr Fahey refers is the entire WADA system. A question arises, however, as to the consistency of that system's 'efforts'.


In the previous WADAwatch post, legal anomalies for the basis of WADA's statistics reporting for the 2008 Lab Report, were aptly highlighted. That Report included, as an explanation, Footnote 2 (FN2), which justified the inclusion of (within the statistics on legal AAFs) past numbers of “AF (Atypical Finding) results” from 2003 through 2007. Their legal basis to do so (ostensibly to offer well-founded comparative results), remains unclear.


WADAwatch noted three major problems incorporated by this act of Reporting: by including 2008 AF findings in a 2009 official Report, from statistics gleaned from its family of 'accredited laboratories', WADA is 'jumping the gun' by reporting these. AFs were not legally in existence until the ISL, WADC and Tech Docs came into force after January 2009, thus compiling statistics one year early doesn't make sense. Second problem, was that WADA evidently 'knew' (as clear reading of the FN2 reveals) some of its previously-proclaimed AAF Sample analyses (and of course, Athletes) were not AAFs, but had been publicly disclosed as such for those first five years (2003 – 2007), while (now) apparently only being 'AFs', which are lower -threshold anomalies: a 'non-positive', a 'report' provoked by 'atypicality of findings' of a Substance, from whichever body fluid(s) were examined, and for which the Lab's Senior Management wishes to find more information or investigate further. Yet inclusion of the AF stats calls into question how this WADA system appears to be working. The third problem is either moral or legal; if WADA is denominating previously reported AAFs as AFs, up to six years after those AAF were announced, it may have a legal obligation to at least publish the numbers, or identify individual cases that were the basis for these abracadabrasque, statistical sleights-of-hand, now in the end of 2009.


As long as WADA has been operating under its Code, it has promoted the concept of 'laboratory standardization'. To assist in analysing (for our own understanding) the statistics provided by WADA, we developed our own Table of WADA lab statistics, which ranks from 1 to 34 the WADA laboratories by their percentage of achieved 'Findings'. We hesitate to rail against the fact that labs under a 'unified' system, are offering percentages that range from nearly five percent, to barely one-half percent. Take a look at WADAwatch's table, first...


(Save a copy! You have permission; it shows better enlarged.)


The underlying issue resulting from this disclosure of WADA laboratories and their annual reporting of 'Findings', remains pre-eminent: what statistic confirms that WADA has produced a 'standardized system'?


It comes as no surprise which laboratory takes First Place, the systemic Gold Star, by holding the highest percentage of AAF (plus AF) findings. The AFLD 'département des analyses', formerly the French LNDD, holds this 'chapeau'. Following closely are Madrid, Ghent and Prague; these four laboratories complete the group that have 'Findings' results higher than four percent (4pc). Five other labs fill the ranks of labs showing between three and four percent. Nine labs share eight places in labs producing 'Findings' within two to three percent: Lausanne and the newest ('Welcome!') WADA lab from New Delhi, show an identical 'Findings' result (2.46pc). En suite, eleven labs float between one and two percent levels; the lowest group itself, between 0.50 and one percent, includes five labs. See our Table's lower left corner to capture the 'Regional Subtotals', and the lower right shows subtotals by 'percentile'. The 'Top Four' labs, are eleven (11pc) percent of the family of labs (4/34ths) yet created 707 AAFs, a number which equals 23pc of the total 2008 AAFs.


More astonishing analysis comes, however, from examining the number of 'Samples' that were run, by percentile of 'Findings'. The four 'most positive' labs ran just over nine percent of the Samples: 26,115 in sum. The five 'least positive' labs ran 39.84pc of the 2008 Samples: 109,406. The labs that report less than two (2pc) positives but more than one percent, ran 74,723 Samples. That equates to 184,129 Samples, or barely over 67pc of the annual number, showing less than two percent positive 'Findings'.


All four of the 'most positive-findings' laboratories are in Europe; none of the 'least positive-findings' are in Europe: two are from the USA (L.A. and Salt Lake City), two from Asia (Tokyo, Beijing) and Ankara (Turkey: we define 'Europe' as does Nicolas Sarkozy). Our presumption is that WADA is currently questioning these disparate statistics at great length, internally and with correspondence with its Signatories, for the stats call into question 'by what sense' the WADA system is functioning, under the title of 'Laboratory Standardization'. As to the 'champion of positives', under the guidance of AFLD and Pierre Bordry, one might think WADA would add this 'achievement' by that Agency to its analysis, pertaining to various counter-charges levied against the AFLD by the UCI response-report of late October.


The phrase 'the Beauty of Science' has a regular place in texts posted by WADAwatch. When the Beauty of Science is surrounded (Suborned? Submerged?) by national politics, international politics, and the World of Sport, it becomes hard to imagine whether a majority of labs' Sample analyses, which show 'low positives', are 'falsely reporting negatives' that should, de facto be 'positives', or whether the opposite is true.


Standardization of laboratories does not mean, ipso facto, that all must have the same IRMS machine; it should mean that whichever IRMS machine, in all WADA labs, when given a Sample (for control/test purposes) in pristine condition, containing an identical concentration of, let's say Testosterone metabolites such as 5-alpha diol and 5-beta diol, ought to be able to identify those metabolites, and their concentrations, at the anticipated level (within scientifically-accepted, statistically acceptable norms: like 0.001 to 0.0001pc).


It does not mean that all labs should operate (within the variations of linguistic or legal necessity) with the identical Laboratory Chain of Custody (LCOC) form (wouldn't that be nice, though?); it does mean, however, that any legal evidence derived be acceptably sufficient, satisfying WADA (or higher) standards for disciplinary hearings. These are necessities, if the system is not to be perceived as a hodge-podge of 'don't touch my Science!' participants.


Is the Los Angeles laboratory, which ran over seven times as many Samples in 2008 (72,394 to 10,194) and found 'AAF Findings', at a rate over seven times less frequently, (0.64pc to 4.98pc) as did the AFLD lab, a much 'better lab'? Could it be 'full of deceit', and 'aiding Athletes to cheat'? Not likely, is this author's opinion.


Is a perfect laboratory at some median level in between these two 'extremes'? Are they 'Standardized'? WADAwatch certainly cannot answer the dilemma this question provokes.


It can only pose the questions... and salute the true fact: cheating Athletes (rather 'doping Athletes': cheaters still exist, for 'handballs' that allow a trip to the World Cup, or 'betting scandals' that are ricocheting across European football (soccer) leagues) are, evidently, barely one percent of the total (okay: Athletes who are elite enough to reside 'within the international anti-doping system', and using Substances (or Methods) detectable under today's testing/analysis environment) at 1.08pc (1.84pc by adding in the 'premature' AF numbers). That's a far cry from the 'mob mentality' which claims 'they're all doped!'. And it does ignore the 'migration' by doping Athletes, into medical substances that have yet to be prohibited.


It is in the best interests of Sport: as a joy, as a business, a spectacle or a career, that this progress is acknowledged as a fact.


WADA should not mask its successes under statistics that seem to imply promotion of the inverse.




To be continued... "And..... action!"

..........@......... WADAWATCH
one hundred percent pure

copyright 2009 Ww


Friday, 16 November 2007

Madrid NINE: WADA CODE in the nose...

When you ask a noted British journalist, in the midst of a salmon-flavoured conversation, what his opinion is about WADA (or perhaps in the interests of neutral objectivity: what he'd heard in jest about WADA), you may not be surprised to hear this:

“WADA is a masking agent...”


Another brilliant lunch, as we prepared to endure the long series of brisk interventions regarding WADA's prepared, redrafted CODE.

The point made by my luncheon-table partner (of eight), an international bilingual table of French and English-natives, is an important one that WADAwatch has been pondering.

Is WADA becoming a victim of its own success?

Will WADA be able to maintain its high-profile momentum, transcend its high-profile, outgoing President Dick Pound, and implement (in 2009) a newly-forged CODE, or...

From the Madrid Conference Dungeon, home of all goodly Observers in the B class...


The question becomes:

Will WADA suffer from having opened a door that it no longer has the force of nature to close?

Recall that in Madrid SIX: Overnight Contemplations, WADAwatch mentioned that, only a generation ago, it was the Governments themselves that created the Doping Generation, a Cold-War tool that purported to invigorate a country's standings in the 'Medal War Count' that are still so fondly marked in any country with Olympic reasons for glory... this was one of the points that were supporting the idea mentioned, that WADA is a 'masking agent', which presumes the power to turn the tide of a multi-billion-dollar business.

Can WADA and governments stop science's advances, and the perversion of those advances toward an outcome wherein an athlete cheats, a doping-substance-supplier gets richer, and the Public, the Sponsors (offering a Great Benefit towards Presumption of Innocence to some who may not merit that) come out the poorer, and the most deceived.

WADAwatch proposed that the Marion Jones / Bjarne Riis models of confession (voluntary as was Riis, more-or-less compelled as was Jones), are one of WADA's strongest weapons.

Now that Sport is a Business of global importance, and the nefast transfer of the 'power' to suggest doping to Athletes (from some unscrupulous sources, certainly!) has gone from 'patriotic' to 'bottom line', whether that be corporate sponsor, or Team, or Individual, someone has gauged their risks and costs (financial, health, longevity of activity (if caught) against perceived benefits and...

It has become the "crime of the decade", selling papers, selling lab-testing services, submerging Federations in financially-bankrupting paperchases and Athlete-chases (for out of competition situations, Swiss has a Testing officer that logs nearly a half-million km annually to perform over 800 OOC tests)

Will the New WADA, under the New President (to be announced tomorrow, Saturday, the 17th of November, 2007), be able to a) grow the budget, b) maintain the competence of laboratory-testing that has, through the light of more intense public scrutiny, showed the weaknesses and over-amplified the needs of these Laboratories to find better testing transparency, competency, and legal and scientific reliability?

From a lower-level (here at the Conference...) perspective, WADAwatch concedes that a new President may have the 'tabla rasa' chance to regain some of the dispersed energy that were produced through certain regrettable WADA or Pound-oriented incidents, yet that regained momentum is what any organization needs, if a mandate forgotten comes again to the forefront in its quest to succeed.

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FLASH: an Intervention (typing and listening are sometimes incompatible, apologies for not naming the Federation that has stated this) has just enforced that, through WADA's rapid acquisition of 'accredited labs', latent disparities have revealed unequal levels of testing competence, and that the 'WADA Laboratory point system' should be accelerated.

WADAwatch will investigate this for further information.


WATCH!LIVE! WADA

..........@..........WADAwatch

Friday, 19 October 2007

NEWS update: Reuters on CAS and the Landis case

WADAwatch found an interesting Reuters article, which offers some analysis of how the CAS tribunal operates. Read the full article for more details.

The article is entitled:

"Landis appeal throws spotlight on sports court"

In it they make this comment:

"Landis can perhaps draw more comfort from the fact that CAS has frequently sided against sporting bodies that failed to follow proper test procedures or correctly enact anti-doping legislation."


Given the known 'points of uncertainty' (not to be confused with 'measurement uncertainty') that were prevalent in this case, it is very much a case of an appeal that calls into question the entire embodiment of what WADA represents, how it presents itself, and how it intends to rectify what may be innocent oversights, or natural evolution, of a young and growing system.

Yet the system must be fair, as the CAS tribunal has repeatedly noted, both in past litigations before WADA, and in recent ones. As the CAS stated in the Landaluce case (somewhat similar conditions to Mr Landis' case):

117. In any case, the present decision does not constitute a declaration of innocence of Mr Landaluce with regard to the antidoping rules. Mr Landaluce merely benefits from a rule that is formal and yet fundamental, which aims to guarantee the rights of persons subject to doping control tests.


IF the world asks 'when will cyclists learn they cannot get away with doping?', then the world has to respond in asking "When are the laboratories that are accredited by WADA going to learn THEIR lessons?".

Fair is fair... and formal... and fundamental... with guarantees...

Watch! WADA

..........@..........WADAwatch




Tuesday, 9 October 2007

Tuesday News Roundup: Second UK laboratory voluntarily drops WADA Accreditation

And then there were thirty-three...

The Cambridge Evening News (fond memories for TeamZEN; summer of 1995, International Law studies at Cambridge, Downing College) has a hot article, stating that one of the TWO UK laboratories to have earned a WADA accreditation is backing out of testing on human sporting personalities:

HFL, formerly the Horseracing Forensic Laboratory, has withdrawn from World Anti Doping Agency's (WADA) accreditation which could have seen the Fordham company testing samples from Olympic athletes.

The company, which employs 130 people, gained accreditation three years ago, but the company has said it will now concentrate on screening food supplements for athletes to ensure they do not contain any banned substances.


+ + + + + +


Some may chafe under their necks, but here's a cool extract of an article from the site BikeRadar.com, entitled "Humour: How to talk to non-cyclists"

(By Elden "The Fat Cyclist" Nelson):

Rule 4. Act like their theory on doping in cycling is very interesting

A tactic non-cyclists will often employ, once they have discovered you are a cyclist, is to try to talk with you about cycling. This usually takes the form of trying to talk with you about doping in cycling.
You will, no doubt, be tempted to gouge your ears out rather than hear their simplistic, uninformed opinion ("Doping is bad") to its rambling, incoherent conclusion. After all, as a cyclist, you have no doubt been pummelled with story after story after story about doping. You have heard so much about doping that you could now be called as an expert witness at the next doping trial. Or open a lab. Or be the next president of WADA (and you're rightly confident you'd do a much better job).



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The website for the Ledger-Inquirer has this follow-up story, "
IOC aims to strip Jones of Sydney medals" from Associated Press sports writer Stephen Wilson, regarding Marion Jones:

"This is a sad day for sport. The only good that can be drawn from today's revelations is that her decision to finally admit the truth will play we hope, a key part in breaking the back of the BALCO affair," IOC president Jacques Rogge said. "The IOC has since 2004 wanted to ascertain the extent to which the case has had an impact on the Olympic Games. Our disciplinary commission, which has been working on this file over the past years, will now glean what it can from her comments, and work with the IAAF and the USOC on how to finally get to the bottom of this sorry case."


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WADA attempts appeal in spite of Federation not being a Signatory of WADA Code.

The ICC, or International Cricket Council, became a WADA Signatory after two of its international stars were 'chastised' for nandralone testing.

See more by clicking here "
ICC's delay in signing WADA code let Shoaib, Asif go scot-free " at the India Times site:

WADA Director General David Howman said they were not impressed with the ICC's handling of the doping fiasco involving pace duo Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Asif, who had tested positive for banned drug nandrolone in an internal test conducted by the Pakistan Cricket Board before the Champions Trophy last year.

"We were not happy with the manner in which the issue was dealt with but could do nothing about it," Howman said referring to PCB appellate tribunal revoking the bans on the bowlers despite the two admitting that they had taken the banned substance "unknowingly."

"We went to CAS but they said they had no jurisdiction over the matter as the ICC were not signatories to the WADA code then..."


WADAwatch comment:

Should this clarify if CAS said that the case from WADA was not receivable, because WADA had no jurisdiction to appeal from a non-Signatory Federation's case? CAS as far as WADAwatch knows, is available to arbitrate any sporting decision between the parties.


If WADA was not a party to the ICC case, why is it wasting its financial resources to seek an appeal where it has no standing (a legal 'term of art')?

Hmmmm?

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More to come tomorrow, but remember, you can always



WATCH? WADA,

..........@..........WADAwatch

Wednesday, 26 September 2007

Day TWO at WADAwatch

Am creating the links we'll need, and getting GoogleBOTS to fill my inbox(es) with yet more information regarding WADA, its Revision Convention 2007 (Madrid: olé!!!) and more...

Thanks for your support, and I hope that, with my perseverance and hard work, the world will soon have a better means of judging the efforts of WADA to control its Vassals, its Fiefdom, and perhaps even win a case or two, based on
solid evidence
.

As for some blatant self-promotion, this Blog is a spin-off from
crystelZENmud, and I provide you with some links to past writings, below.


RECENT:


Floyd Landis Decision posts @ crystelZENmud:

WADA DECISION: the Landis case
WADA LOSER: the Presumption


WADA QUESTIONNAIRE posts
@ crystelZENmud:

Part I : A Questionaire for WADA Signatories PART II: WADA gonna do about Madrid in November? PART III: WADA questionnaire – analytical wrap-up...


Watch WADA...
WATCH, WADA!

@

.......................WADAwatch


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