Future of Sport: A Global Sports Week x Viva Technology Collaboration, Will Open in June 14
12 Jun 2023 14:59
SportAccord's fruitful conversation with Gillian Sanders, who participated in a panel on the theme of “Keeping Female Athletes Healthy” at SportAccord.
©️Getty Images
As a three-time Olympian and lawyer who has navigated the transition from competition to governance, World Sailing Integrity Manager Gillian Sanders is highly qualified to offer a 360-degree perspective on the challenges facing women in sport.
Sanders, who competed in triathlon for South Africa at the London, Rio and Tokyo Games, explored various issues relating to ‘Keeping Female Athletes Healthy’ during HealthAccord – and she is clear about the major obstacles to progress in 2024.
“The major health-related issue for women in sport right now is negative body image and the resultant health-related knock-on effects,” Sanders said “Having worked on the UK Sport-funded Sport Integrity pilot project, I can say that the majority of the reports submitted by athletes comprised fat shaming and psychological abuse of female athletes by their coaches.
“We know this very often leads to eating disorders or disordered eating and the knock on effects such as RED-S (Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport) which can lead to bone injuries and worse, such as osteoporosis, not to mention the very damaging impact on mental health. There are still pressures on female athletes to look a certain way.
“It is important that IFs, National Federations and National Olympic Committees have robust safeguarding policies and procedures in place, including a confidential reporting mechanism so that athletes who may be subject to abuse have the confidence to report abuses.” Sanders stresses the importance of education so that unacceptable behaviour is truly understood, while IFs should also signpost athletes to further support, particularly if they are under-resourced themselves. Furthermore, whilst some IFs have updated maternity policies to include enhanced pregnancy and postpartum support, others are “lagging behind”.
Sanders adds: “It would be great to see maternity policies include more emphasis on the safe return to training and competing, as well as safe spaces for female athletes with babies and those breastfeeding.”
On this point, Sanders explains that it is “hugely important” to provide health management support and guidance, not only to elite female athletes, but also to grassroots participants.
“Body image plays a massive role in this and research has shown that a large percentage of girls fall out of sport due to negative body image-related reasons,” Sanders says. “We need a robust message to young female athletes that ‘strong is beautiful’. There are some incredible athlete role models out there to look up to instead of the often harmful beauty content shared by social media influencers.
“I believe it’s important to instil in young girls sport is cool and fun. This was certainlymy experience. This positive message resonated with me throughout school, leadingto a love and enjoyment of sport.”
Sanders is part of World Sailing’s legal team, leading on safeguarding and antidoping issues. Although she acknowledges that safeguarding has “progressed massively… there is still a lot of work to be done” across the broader sports industry.
Sanders elaborates: “It is seemingly easy for perpetrators to hop countries due to jurisdictional challenges and continue their abuse elsewhere. There is also no global code such as there is in anti-doping. It is up to the country or the sport to have a safeguarding policy and many countries and sports still don’t have anything in place.
Progression wise, after the gymnastics abuse in the USA came to light a few years ago, there was a massive shift – athletes suddenly felt confident to speak up and sports were forced to act.
“Anti-doping has made progress, but there is also still work to be done. Blood spot testing is one of the more recent developments – the tests are cheaper and more efficient than blood or urine tests, but they only pick up a limited range of substances. All methods of testing are expensive, and sports have limited budgets.”
However, from the viewpoint of somebody who has been there and done it, has there been sufficient change in terms of representation of women in governance?
“The landscape is shifting very slowly but probably not quickly enough,” Sanders says. “Some sports are much more progressive than others and some countries are much more progressive than others. Generally speaking, there is still not enough representation by women in senior leadership roles.”
Partners
The SportAccord World Sport & Business Summit 2024 is supported by a number of strong partners and suppliers:
Gold Partner: Sport Event Denmark
Silver Partners: EventScotland, Explore Edmonton, Tourism & Events Queensland
Bronze Partner: Sport Liverpool , Sports Authority Thailand
Official Suppliers: DB Schenker, Wiz-Team
About SportAccord World Sport & Business Summit
The SportAccord World Sport & Business Summit brings together around 1,500 leaders and key decision makers from over 120 International Federations (IFs), the International Olympic Committee, and organisations involved in the business of sport.
The Summit provides an unrivalled platform enabling global business leaders and host cities to have access to all the International Federations and their stakeholders in one location over several days.
This unique event is a combination of official sports meetings, networking gatherings, a themed conference programme, and exhibition space enabling International Federations, industry, cities and regions to showcase and advance their sport, services and facilities.
About SPORTACCORD
SportAccord is a sports event organisation based in the Olympic Capital, Lausanne, Switzerland, and governed by stakeholders representing the Olympic and non-Olympic International Federations.
It brings together International Federations and organisations involved in the business of sport with the aim to serve, promote and protect the common interests of its stakeholders, help them achieve their global objectives and facilitate knowledge-sharing.
SportAccord’s stakeholders include:
ASOIF (Association of Summer Olympic International Federations)
WOF (Winter Olympic Federations)
ARISF (Association of IOC Recognised International Sports Federations)
AIMS (Alliance of Independent Recognised Members of Sport)
Visit SportAccord.sport for more information.
About Yutang Sports
As one of SportAccord's Principal Media Partners, Yutang Sports is a Chinese leading sports marketing and media platform, with an ultimate mission to connect China and world through sports. After years of growing, Yutang Sports, with a comprehensive media and marketing promotion system, is now dedicating to reporting sports business and marketing trends, providing sports business news, analysis, and exclusive data reports in both Chinese and English. Having been cooperated with top-level domestic and international sports summits, Yutang Sports is opening a window for Chinese sports industry to embrace the world.
Future of Sport: A Global Sports Week x Viva Technology Collaboration, Will Open in June 14
12 Jun 2023 14:59
Related coverage
Birmingham is embracing a bright future supported by extraordinary sporting legacy
17 Apr 2024
Queensland’s Tourism Industry Development Minister to Welcome Delegates to CityAccord 2019
28 Nov 2018
Squash will be significantly boosted by LA28 inclusion
17 Apr 2024
SportAccord Welcomes Return of Principal Media Partner Yutang Sports
01 Feb 2024
SportAccord Bronze Partners Make Their Mark on Global Stage
08 Mar 2024
More from Yutang Sports
Ingmar De Vos elected as the next ASOIF President
10 Apr 2024
SportAccord's interview with Sarah Gregorius: proactive actions are necessary to tackle online abuse
28 Apr 2024
Interview with Yiannis Exarchos: to narrate Olympic story in new ways and promote positive values
01 Jul 2024
SportAccord calls for the power of sport to lead anti-abuse actions
17 Apr 2024
SportAccord 2024 makes a memorable return to Birmingham
13 Apr 2024
Yutang Sports
loading...