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July 1, 2005
Warning Signs:
So what can be done to curb this trend? According to Jeff Rutstein, a reformed steroid addict and author of The Steroid Deceit: A Body Worth Dying For?, it has to start at the top: "When a child sees an admired professional athlete using steroids without repercussions, it diminishes whatever warnings that child might hear about the drugs. Thus, we must hold our professional athletes accountable." Jeff has this message for students: "Students have to realize that the effects of steroids don't last. Once they get off the drug, within a very short period, all the strength and muscular gains will be lost. This creates a vicious cycle because they'll want to take larger quantities, creating a never-ending journey for some. They have to think about the long-term consequences and realize that doing steroids is cheating and just a short term fix." Harrison G. Pope, Jr., M.D., professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, has this to say about Jeff Rutstein's desire to educate young people about steroids: "Jeff takes us behind the veneer of muscles and gives us a personal look at the insidious hold that steroids had on his life. I would strongly recommend The Steroid Deceit: A Body Worth Dying For? to any young person who is using steroids or considering using them, and to parents worried that their children might be using steroids" The Steroid Deceit: A Body Worth Dying For?, by Jeff Rutstein, Publisher: Custom Fitness, ISBN: 0-9760170-2-4, US $12.95, paperback 108 pages. Available on the Web, through local bookstores, and major distributors or from the author at: www.steroiddeceit.com. For author interviews contact Jeff Rutstein at 1-800-374-9959 or pub@customfitness.com.
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