I have learnt a new word at Supercare4u.com today. Haven't heard of it before. It seems the build-up to the Paralympics disabled Games has been blighted by tales of deliberate "performance enhancing" injuries to the Paralympics starting August 29 to September 9 ,2012
The practice of "boosting", where wheelchair-bound athletes hurt themselves to increase blood pressure and endurance, is banned by the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) but is surprisingly common. A survey of athletes at the 2008 Beijing Paralympics showed around 17 percent had used boosting.
Able-bodied athletes naturally increase blood pressure through certain exercise and can therefore push themselves harder but those with spinal injuries cannot do so easily.
One way of increasing blood pressure is to injure yourself with common ways of boosting including breaking toes, letting your bladder overfill, sitting on sharp objects, wearing overly tight leg wear or even trapping the scrotum.
Checks for boosting, which is considered dangerous by doctors as it can induce strokes or intracranial haemorrhage and death, include blood pressure tests and monitoring for tell-tale signs such as skin blotches.
However, doctors in the Beijing survey acknowledged that "it is possible that some athletes could have induced boosting during the competition and circumvented the initial screening process. This is difficult to monitor and poses a real challenge to the procedures for monitoring boosting in these athletes. Boosting, known medically as the intentional induction of autonomic dysreflexia, has been compared to doping in Paralympic circles.
It's all about the Gold Medal.