Lt. Marissa Anne Connolly, D.O., showed a portion of Wilson’s talk at APA’s Annual Meeting today during a session about addiction among athletes. Connolly, a fourth-year psychiatry resident at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, was joined by Bhagwan Bahroo, M.D., an assistant professor of psychiatry at the Uniformed Services University; Lt. Thanh Nguyen, M.D., a child and adolescent psychiatry fellow at Walter Reed; and Capt. Katrina Wachter, M.D., a forensic psychiatry fellow at Walter Reed.
“We talk about the remarkable abilities and dedication that we see in our athletes, but they also face a lot of unique challenges and vulnerabilities that can predispose them to substance use disorders or behavioral disorders,” Wachter said.
Connolly spoke about perfectionism, which might drive an athlete to great success or influence their development of an addiction. “There’s an intersection between compulsive behavior and perfectionism,” she explained. “These intertwine together in athletes to almost create a perfect storm that really puts these individuals at risk for developing addictions.”
Addictions among athletes may include substance use disorders, gambling disorders, and exercise addictions, among others. These disorders may also be entwined with eating disorders, the speakers pointed out.
Nguyen explained the difficulties in delineating function from dysfunction in this group. “Where we draw that line of function is sometimes hard because people's goals are different, including the parents’ goals, the coach’s goals, and the athlete’s goals.”
One of the ways to understand when athletes’ perfectionism has crossed the line into dysfunction is when they are evaluated for an addiction, Connolly said. There are some notable similarities between the diagnostic criteria for addiction and the compulsive and perfectionist tendencies that high-performing athletes engage in. Some of those criteria include engaging in a behavior to a greater extent than was originally intended, unsuccessful efforts to stop or reduce that behavior, or continued use of the substance or engagement in the behavior despite obvious negative consequences.
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