TY - JOUR T1 - Breaking a taboo: why the International Olympic Committee convened experts to develop a consensus statement on mental health in elite athletes JF - British Journal of Sports Medicine JO - Br J Sports Med DO - 10.1136/bjsports-2019-100681 SP - bjsports-2019-100681 AU - Brian Hainline AU - Claudia L Reardon Y1 - 2019/05/08 UR - http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/early/2019/04/24/bjsports-2019-100681.abstract N2 - Mental health symptoms and disorders are ubiquitous in society and are too often underdiagnosed and undermanaged—or worse, ignored. We speak of mental health symptoms and disorders as if they are somehow separate from other ‘physical’ symptoms, injuries and illnesses. Mental health symptoms and disorders and other physical symptoms, injuries and illnesses are intertwined yet artificially separated by diagnostic criteria that perpetuate a mind–body dualism. This dualism ignores brain circuits and the human being. Although clinicians are constrained to work within the current established criteria for mental health symptoms and disorders, they must also be mindful of a broader interconnectedness: mental health symptoms and disorders increase the risk of injury, delay recovery following injury and impair athletic performance, while injury and poor athletic performance often trigger mental health symptoms and disorders, especially depression and anxiety.1–10 Physiology and perception are one.Even though elite athletes live in a culture of being ‘tough’ and ‘looking fit’, they suffer from many mental health symptoms and disorders at rates similar to those of the general population.11 12 The incidence of eating disorders and some substance use disorders in elite athletes exceed those in the general population.13–23 Sport-specific stressors and environmental factors, including psychological, physical or sexual abuse,24 injury,25 barriers to mental … ER -