Professor Sue Backhouse

Professor of Sport Psychology and Behavioural Nutrition Leeds Beckett University

  • Leeds England

Her particular expertise is in athlete welfare, drug use in sport, why athletes dope, what makes athletes vulnerable to doping and more.

Contact

University Alliance

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Areas of Expertise

Doping
Drug Use in Sport
Sports Integrity
Athlete Welfare
Clean Sport
Whistleblowing
Sport Psychology and Performance Enhancement

Biography

Professor Sue Backhouse is Professor of Sport Psychology and Behavioural Nutrition, and Director of Research in the Carnegie School of Sport at Leeds Beckett University.

Sue is an internationally recognised expert on anti-doping and her research focuses on developing a better understanding of the complexity of doping and clean sport behaviours in order to develop effective anti-doping policy and practice. Recent projects include a World Anti-Doping Agency funded project on reporting doping in sport and a European Commission funded project to establish the Clean Sport Alliance (www.cleansportalliance.org).

Sue is a member of the World Anti-Doping Agency’s Social Science Expert Advisory Group, an Expert Member of the English Institute of Sport Technical Steering Panel, Co-founder of the Clean Sport Alliance and Convenor of the British Association of Sport and Exercise Science’s Clean Sport Interest Group. She has examined integrity and welfare issues across a range of sports and worked with the World Anti-Doping Agency, International Olympic Committee, Institute of National Anti-Doping Organisations, the Rugby Football Union and Sport Ireland. Sue established the Protecting Sporting Integrity and Welfare (PROSPER) research team at Leeds Beckett University (https://www.leedsbeckett.ac.uk/research/centre-for-human-performance/sporting-integrity-and-welfare/).

Media Mentions

Global sports anti-doping conference being led by Leeds Beckett University

Yorkshire Evening Post  online

2020-12-08

Athletes are taking part in a global anti-doping conference being led by Leeds Beckett University this week.

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Yorkshire at the forefront in beating doping in sport

Yorkshire Post  online

2020-05-25

Professor Sue Backhouse, report co-author and director of research at the Carnegie School of Sport at Leeds Beckett, said Wada now needed to develop better policies to encourage the reporting of doping.

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Negative backlash for reporting doping the biggest barrier for potential whistleblowers, study finds

Cycling Weekly  online

2020-05-16

Being negatively labelled for reporting doping is the biggest barrier for potential whistleblowers to come forward, a new study by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has found.

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Multimedia Appearances

Social

Industry Expertise

Research
Sport - Amateur
Sport - Professional

Accomplishments

Esteem

Sue is a Fellow of the British Association of Sport and Exercise Sciences (FBASES), Associate Fellow of the British Psychological Society (AFBPsS) and Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Authority.

Education

Loughborough University

Ph.D.

Sport & Exercise Science

2004

Loughborough University

B.Sc.

Physical Education and Sports Science

2000

Affiliations

  • Member of the World Anti-Doping Agency Social Science Research Panel
  • Co-founder of the Clean Sport Alliance
  • Chartered Member of the British Psychological Society (BPS) Division of Sport and Exercise Psychology.
  • Registered with the Health Professions Council (HCPS) as a Practitioner Sport and Exercise Psychologist.

Languages

  • English

Articles

Understanding and building clean(er) sport together: Community-based participatory research with elite athletes and anti-doping organisations from five European countries

Psychology of Sport and Exercise

2021

In sport the narrative is changing from anti-doping to clean sport. Yet, our understanding of what ‘clean sport’ means to athletes is notably absent from the literature. Working together with elite athletes and National Anti-Doping Organisations, this study addressed this gap by exploring the meaning and importance of ‘clean sport’ and ‘clean athlete identity’.

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An intervention to optimise coach-created motivational climates and reduce athlete willingness to dope (CoachMADE): a three-country cluster randomised controlled trial

British Journal of Sports Medicine

2020

Coach-centred antidoping education is scarce. We tested the efficacy of a motivationally informed antidoping intervention for coaches, with their athletes’ willingness to dope as the primary outcome.

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‘Clean athlete status’ cannot be certified: Calling for caution, evidence and transparency in ‘alternative’ anti-doping systems

International Journal of Drug Policy

2020

Athletes, sponsors and sport organisations all have a vested interest in upholding the values of clean sport. Despite the considerable and concerted efforts of the global anti-doping system over two decades, the present system is imperfect.

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