Recent Deaths Shine Light on Athletes' Depression

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Recent Deaths Shine Light on Athletes' Depression

By Steve Keating

TORONTO (Reuters) Aug 18 - The recent deaths of three North American athletes have nudged the spotlight away from doping and concussions to shine a light on another of elite sport's darkest secrets -- depression.

It has been a tragic off-season for National Hockey League players and fans who have been rocked by the deaths of Canadians Rick Rypien, 27, and 28-year-old Derek Boogaard.

The Olympic community has also been shaken by the suicide of 29-year-old U.S. freestyle skier Jeret 'Speedy' Peterson, a silver medalist in the aerials at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics.

While drug-testing and concussion prevention are now discussed openly in locker rooms in sports leagues around the world, depression, a disease that affects millions, remains prevalent in professional sports but gets little attention until tragedy strikes.

Rypien, a scrappy forward who had just signed a one-year contract to play for the Winnipeg Jets, was found dead in his apartment on Monday.

The coroner has yet to determine the cause of death but Rypien had grappled with depression for a decade, a disease that had threatened to derail his NHL career several times.

New York Ranger Boogaard, one of the NHL's most feared enforcers, was found dead in his apartment in May. His death was deemed an accident caused by a lethal cocktail of alcohol and painkillers.

Peterson, who had admitted to problems with alcohol and depression, was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot in a remote canyon in Utah.

"I think there remains a significant stigma (about depression) in the general population but more so in the professional athlete," Dr. Don Malone, head of the Psychiatric Neuromodulation Center at the Cleveland Clinic, told Reuters.

"There's an aspect to it in the athletes that they want to keep it hidden.

"Athletes are not immune. They can suffer silently."

Rypien and Boogaard earned their living on the NHL's unforgiving fringes, and were fighting to keep their places on their teams.

Rypien, the son of a former amateur boxing champion, reputedly loved his job and delighted in squaring off with bigger, heavier challengers as an NHL tough guy.

He had sought help from the league's substance abuse and behavior health program which was put in place in 1996 to help players and their families deal with a variety of issues from grief counseling to drug abuse and depression.

About 14.8 million Americans are diagnosed with depression each year. About seven million receive treatment, according to Dr. Alan Manevitz, a clinical psychiatrist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York.

Hall of Fame quarterback Terry Bradshaw, nine-time tennis grand slam champion Monica Seles and Cy Young award-winning pitcher Zack Greinke all waged battles with depression.

Former Toronto Maple Leaf great Ron Ellis is now a speaker on the importance of diagnosing and treating clinical depression.

"When you're on top of your career, there is intense pressure to stay on top ... particularly in incredibly competitive careers like in pro sports, show business," Jeffrey Parsons, an addiction expert and professor of psychology at Hunter College in New York, told Reuters.

"The reasons that might tend to weigh on someone could lead to depression, suicide and substance abuse with the spotlight being on them so heavily and so often."

Reuters Health Information ? 2011
 
Depression is so prevalent in society it's bound to affect athletes as well as non athletes.
 
It effects everyone, especially me when these dam doctors keep using me a guinea pig with all these knee surgery's now pain mgmt docs will be doing back,hip, right knee MRI's and talk about more surgery to get me reaired once and for all? I hope anyway..
 
i feel it in the winter months, thoughts of suicide and everything. but i also recognize it and know better so its not a threat...
 
I know it effects everyone but its much worse in athletes

If you spend your entire life playing sports then u blow out your knee in your rookie year, recover, blow it out again, careers basically over

where does your life go from there? most of these guys didnt graduate or have a useless degree in something they cant really apply to anything in real life

future looks very very bleak at that point
 
When I suffered my second knee injury I was down for the count for quite a while. No more kickboxing, no more contact martial arts at all. It was a rude awakening to just how fragile my psyche was and how intertwined it was to my physical capabilities.
It sucked big time!
 

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