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Parry, John Weston

WORK TITLE: The Athlete’s Dilemma
WORK NOTES:
PSEUDONYM(S):
BIRTHDATE:
WEBSITE: http://www.sportpathologies.com/index.html
CITY:
STATE:
COUNTRY:
NATIONALITY:

https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-parry-293555138/ * https://rowman.com/FeaturedAuthor/305?author=John%20Weston%20Parry * http://www.leagueoffans.org/2017/07/20/q-a-with-john-weston-parry/

RESEARCHER NOTES:

LC control no.: n 2013036682
LCCN Permalink: https://lccn.loc.gov/n2013036682
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PERSONAL

Born June 27, 1948.

EDUCATION:

Lake Forest College, B.A.; Washington University School of Law, Lake Forest College, J.D.

ADDRESS

CAREER

Writer. Lawyer. Sportpatholgies.com, website host. Worked formerly as the editor-in-chief of the Mental and Physical Disability Law Reporter between 1979 and 2011 and as the director of the American Bar Association’s Commission on Disability Rights between 1982 and 2012.

AWARDS:

American Psychiatric Association and the American Academy of Psychiatry and Law, Manfred Guttmacher award.

WRITINGS

  • Mental Disability, Violence, and Future Dangerousness: Myths Behind the Presumption of Guilt, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. (Lanham, MD), 2013
  • The Athlete's Dilemma: Sacrificing Health for Wealth and Fame, Rowman & Littlefield (Lanham, MD), 2017

SIDELIGHTS

John Weston Parry is a writer, lawyer, and host of website and blog, sportpatholgies.com. He attended college at Lake Forest College, where he studied government and psychology. It was during this time that he began to take an interest in social and civil rights issues as they relate to professional sports. Following graduation, he went on to receive his J.D. from Washington University School of Law at Lake Forest College.

Parry was the editor-in-chief of the Mental and Physical Disability Law Reporter between 1979 and 2011 and worked as director of the American Bar Association’s Commission on Disability Rights between 1982 and 2012. His work within sports pathology writing and law focuses on mental health and criminal activity, discrimination and lack of diversity, and corruption. Parry lives in Silver Spring, Maryland.

In The Athlete’s Dilemma: Sacrificing Health for Wealth and Fame, Parry describes how sports culture puts athletes at a higher risk for mental and physical impairments, addiction, and substance abuse. He describes the numerous parties that influence and are affected by this culture, and offers suggestions for how it can be improved.

In the first part of the book, Parry describes the harmful phenomena of ‘playing hurt.’ He writes about how athletes are encouraged to continue playing a sport despite an injury, a lifestyle that can lead to permanent injuries, disabilities, or even death. The second part of the book focuses on performance enhancing drugs. Parry examines the prevalence of these drugs on the professional, collegiate, and Olympic level. Using well-known examples, he describes how the sports organizations either turn a blind eye or actually encourage illegal and dangerous drug use. The third section of the book describes how the attitudes regarding health in professional sports trickle down and influence college-level, scholastic, and youth sports attitudes.

Parry points out many reasons that sports culture has led to such an unhealthy environment for athletes. He makes special note of the role of the NFL, MLB, NCAA, NHL, IOC, USOC, and FIFA organizations that seem to encourage unsafe practices for the sake of larger profits. He ends the book by laying out changes that could encourage a safer sports environment. A contributor to Broadway World wrote: “The book provides reasonable options that athletes, parents, educators, health providers, policy makers, and legislators can embrace without increasing subsidies.” A contributor to Publishers Weekly described the book as a “highly detailed work that should be read by athletes, managers, and sports administrators at all levels.”

BIOCRIT

PERIODICALS

  • Publishers Weekly, May 8, 2017, review of The Athlete’s Dilemma: Sacrificing Health for Wealth and Fame, p. 52.

ONLINE

  • Broadway World https://www.broadwayworld.com/ (June 20, 2017), review of The Athlete’s Dilemma.*

  • Mental Disability, Violence, and Future Dangerousness: Myths Behind the Presumption of Guilt Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. (Lanham, MD), 2013
1. Mental disability, violence, and future dangerousness : myths behind the presumption of guilt LCCN 2013020045 Type of material Book Personal name Parry, John Weston, 1948- Main title Mental disability, violence, and future dangerousness : myths behind the presumption of guilt / John Weston Parry. Published/Produced Lanham, MD : Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., [2013] Description xi, 383 pages ; 24 cm ISBN 9781442224049 (cloth : alk. paper) Shelf Location FLM2014 141979 CALL NUMBER HV3004 .P377 2013 OVERFLOWA5S Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms (FLM1) CALL NUMBER HV3004 .P377 2013 CABIN BRANCH Copy 2 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms - STORED OFFSITE
  • The athlete's dilemma : sacrificing health for wealth and fame - 2017 Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham
  • LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-parry-293555138/

    John Parry
    John Parry
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    author; website host and writer at sportpathologies.com
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    To host and write essays for a website/blog called sportspathologies.com and write books about pathologies in
    sports. My first sports book is The Athlete's Dilemma: Sacrificing Health for Wealth and Fame (Rowman & Littlefield June 2017) . The book incorporates my legal, mental health and disability expertise. For more information visit my website/blog.
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    Experience
    sportpathologies.com
    writer and website host
    Company Namesportpathologies.com
    Education
    Washington University School of Law, Lake Forest College
    Washington University School of Law, Lake Forest College
    Degree NameJ.D. Field Of StudySocio-legal aspects of sports

  • Rowman & Littlefield - https://rowman.com/FeaturedAuthor/305?author=John%20Weston%20Parry

    John Weston Parry is a lawyer, writer, and host of the website and blog sportpatholgies.com. He is the former director of the American Bar Association’s Commission on Disability Rights (1982-2012) and editor/editor-in-chief of the Mental and Physical Disability Law Reporter (1979-2011). He has published numerous books and articles on mental disability and health law, diversity, and the rights of persons with disabilities, including Mental Disability, Violence, Future Dangerousness: Myths Behind the Presumption of Guilt (Rowman & Littlefield, 2013).

    Click here to read the League of Fans interview with author John Weston Parry.

  • League of Fans - http://www.leagueoffans.org/2017/07/20/q-a-with-john-weston-parry/

    Q & A with John Weston Parry
    by LEAGUE OF FANS on JULY 20, 2017 · LEAVE A COMMENT

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    SUMO
    A League of Fans Special Feature

    John Weston Parry

    Q’s & A’s with Leading Sports Reformers

    John Weston Parry is a lawyer, author, and host of the website/blog: Sportpathologies.com. His most recent book is The Athlete’s Dilemma: Sacrificing Health for Wealth and Fame.

    As director of the American Bar Association’s Commission on Disability Rights and editor-in-chief of the Mental and Physical Disability Law Reporter (1979-2012), Parry wrote and edited numerous books and articles about mental disability and health law, diversity, and the rights of persons with disabilities.

    Parry began following sports seriously at Lake Forest College, during the tumult of the late 1960’s and early 1970’s. As a student majoring in government, with a minor in psychology, he wrote several term papers and his honors thesis on social and civil rights issues pertaining to sports. Since that point, he has continued to analyze sports issues critically.

    Today he is using the expertise he accumulated in his professional career to examine pathologies that undermine the ideals of sports through his website/blog and his books. Those pathologies include: (1) health, mental health, and substance abuse problems of athletes; (2) crimes and other bad behaviors of athletes, coaches, and owners; (3) discrimination and lack of diversity in the sports world; and (4) frequent corruption by unregulated cartels that control professional, Olympic, and collegiate sports that do business in the United States.

    Parry was recently interviewed by League of Fans’ Sports Policy Director, Ken Reed.

    Reed: Most of your career has been in mental and physical disability law. What spurred you to write The Athlete’s Dilemma: Sacrificing Heath for Wealth and Fame?

    Parry: My impetus for writing The Athlete’s Dilemma: Sacrificing Health for Wealth and Fame (Rowman & Littlefield, June 16, 2017) was an opportunity to focus on pathologies in sports using the professional expertise I had developed as a lawyer, writer, editor, and advocate immersed in issues involving mental and physical disability law, disability rights, and diversity. I felt I brought unique perspectives to these topics.

    Reed: Your website title is Sportpathologies.com. That’s an interesting title for a sports-based website. What’s the genesis of that name — in particular, the use of the word pathology?

    Parry: As I learned at Columbia School of Public Health, pathology examines the causes, origins, and nature of diseases as they affect the human body and mind. The more common meaning of the term, however, focuses on sharp deviations from what is normal, expected, or healthy.

    Pathologies have developed or evolved in American sports, especially where they have been played at an elite level. There is a culture and locker room atmosphere that, like a disease, penetrates and compromises the ideals of sports. Sport pathologies are often precipitated, or made worse, by money and the pursuit of profits and publicity. There also is an underlying recklessness and malevolence that is associated with the obsession to win.

    Everywhere one looks in our most popular spectator sports, there are serious injuries and life-long impairments, drug problems and addictions, cheating using performance-enhancing substances, and a culture that values playing with pain and injuries more than promoting a lifetime of physical and mental health.

    Many sports teach athletes how to incapacitate their opponents and to cheat as much as the enforcement of the rules will allow, as long as the perpetrators or their teams are not penalized too severely when they are caught. That is what winners are often expected to do in order to be the best. And once most elite athletes can no longer perform, they are left to deal with any physical and mental impairments and addictions they may have sustained without any meaningful organizational support.

    Thus, pathologies struck me as an apt way to describe what is happening to athletes playing sports at an elite level, or just trying to become elite.

    Reed: Some of the sports pathologies you examine in your book include athletes being pushed to play in pain, the use of performance-enhancing drugs, brain trauma and concussions, the proliferation of arm injuries to youth baseball pitchers, and inadequate health care for college athletes. What do you think is the number one sport pathology in the country today?

    Parry: Trying to determine which health-related sport pathology is the worst or most prevalent in this country is almost beside the point. Sports pathologies tend to be connected to a number of similar causes that play out differently depending on the sport. It also depends on whether one is looking at this broad subject area from a micro or macro level.

    On a micro level, arguably concussions and brain traumas are the most disturbing because athletes of all ages and levels of competition in many different sports—not just football and hockey—are at risk for life-altering impairments and a diminution of their cognitive abilities. Moreover, until recently the level of awareness of the seriousness of this problem was appallingly low. In fact, many of the leagues and sports organizations that govern professional, intercollegiate, Olympic, and even youth sports ignored and deliberately minimized the dangers, which has meant that adequate prevention, treatment, and rehabilitation were much less likely to occur.

    On a macro level, I think the one factor uniting all of these health-related pathologies is the role of our unregulated sports cartels. They allow such abuses and transgressions to occur with very little intervention unless profits are at risk. Whether it is the NFL, NHL, NCAA, MLB, IOC, FIFA, or one of the many other cartels in sports, the cover-ups, deceptions, and public relations rationalizations can be mind-numbing.

    These pathologies are made worse because our favorite spectator sports escape the legal and legislative scrutiny that most other businesses expect to receive. Sports are run much like the stock market or mortgage industry, which is to say the best one can expect is “buyer beware,” including the reality that much of the information necessary to make informed decisions is likely to be hidden from view. This is fundamentally against the public interest.

    Reed: Do you see a common root cause linking the various sports pathologies you discuss in your book?

    Parry: There does not appear to be a “common root cause” that unites health and other pathologies in sports. That said, the obsession with personal profits—both in sports and in society—is a factor, which more than any other seems to push us towards unhealthy and morally questionable decisions and outcomes. In addition, that obsession tends to help drive the almost as damaging win-at-any cost ethos because winners are likely to make more money and be awarded more opportunities in life. When one adds fact-deprived publicity and self-serving organizational information, which fuels the pursuit of profits in sports, pathologies are almost inevitable.

    Nonetheless, the obsessions with money, publicity, and winning would never create the social problems they do if it were not for the fact that the leagues and organizations that run our favorite sports are unregulated cartels. This unchecked organizational power structure, when combined with the relentless pursuit of money, publicity, and winning, incubate and often produce unhealthy, corrupt, and bad behaviors.

    Reed: Which sport pathology that you write about poses the biggest threat to athletes – young and old?

    Parry: The biggest threat to athletes, young and old—unregulated sports cartels—is also the threat that can be rectified most easily, at least theoretically. Unfortunately, the practical obstacles are more complex and demanding.

    On my website/blog Sportpathologies.com, there is a separate page devoted to “cartels,” which emphasizes their dominant role in the sports world. Cartels are the biggest threat because they have caused the most damage to elite athletes, young and old, and those aspiring to become elite. They have encouraged their own athletes to take unnecessary risks, act recklessly, engage in bad behaviors, and place winning over good sportsmanship and fair play. Indirectly, they also have encouraged non-elite athletes to do the same, which we have seen in many high school and youth sports programs where academics are short-changed and injuries and the potential for long-term impairments are too easily dismissed.

    When our favorite spectator sports are consumed with making more money, increasing wealth, generating favorable publicity, and winning at any cost, important community values—including the health of the athletes and obtaining the truth—become blurred.

    Not too long ago, The New York Times ran the results of its investigation of youth sports programs, which revealed that too many of these organizations were being run by unscrupulous profiteers. These individuals grab money for themselves either directly by illegal or illicit means, or indirectly by pushing talented athletes towards prep schools, colleges, or the pros and then receiving some sort of pay-off for doing so.

    The fact that the sports cartels and youth programs are largely unregulated, and scholastic and college programs are regulated poorly and granted far too much latitude, has created a vacuum in which athletes, especially those who participate in sports that generate the most income, are drawn to and socialized by the pursuit of profits, wins, publicity, scholarships, and the accumulation of wealth. This happens at the expense of just having fun and promoting the educational, wellness, and community values that athletics are supposed to embody.

    Reed: What do you think is the genesis of the “real athletes play through pain” mentality prevalent in sports at all levels?

    Parry: I think there are a number of factors that contribute to the “real athletes play through pain” cultural imperative. Its genesis, however, is difficult to pinpoint. My feeling is that it is a restatement of the larger historical reality that soldiers and laborers, as well as Olympic athletes, were expected to endure a great deal of pain and discomfort before they were allowed to complain or seek relief, either by stopping what they were doing or obtaining treatment. This began to change substantially towards the middle of the Twentieth Century.

    Elite athletes, however—who tend to view themselves as superior physical beings—and their fans, believe athletes should be better able to withstand pain than other people. They also profit by creating this perception. While this cultural attitude derives from a male-centered perspective, since—until 1950 or so—a vast majority of soldiers, laborers, and athletes were men, the attitude has grown to include more female athletes, as girls and women have had more opportunities to compete.

    Reed: What is your goal with Sportpathologies.com and your sports-oriented books?

    Parry: Fundamentally I am a writer. I love the process of writing. It gives me joy and satisfaction and I suspect it will extend the quality of my life. It is different from work. So having the opportunity to write about sports in books and articles and on my website/blog Sportpathologies.com, utilizing my special expertise, is more than enough motivation for me to continue on this self-fulfilling path.

    That said, it would be nice to inform and entertain a cadre of readers, as well as to make a difference in the lives of athletes, young and old, by helping to create a sports environment that is healthier and ultimately more worthwhile, not only for athletes, but also for society.

    I realize that in the current political environment anyone who promotes more government scrutiny and regulation of any business activity is going to be frustrated. At the time I was submitting The Athlete’s Dilemma to my editors in the fall of 2016, it appeared as if the push for more regulation of sports would be a reasonable political objective. I still believe that relatively soon, but not for several years, it will become reasonable again. In the meantime, I will focus on my website/blog and next book, which is likely to be about sports cartels doing business in the United States.

  • Sport Pathologies - http://www.sportpathologies.com/theathletesdilemma.html

    Author Bio
    John Weston Parry is a writer, lawyer, and host of sportpatholgies.com. He was the director of the American Bar Association’s Commission on Disability Rights (1982-2012) and editor/editor-in-chief of the Mental and Physical Disability Law Reporter (1979-2011). He has written numerous law-related books and articles focusing on disability, mental health, individual rights, and diversity. These include Mental Disability, Violence, Future Dangerousness: Myths Behind the Presumption of Guilt (Rowman & Littlefield, October 2013). He also is a recipient of the Manfred Guttmacher Award from the American Psychiatric Association and the American Academy of Psychiatry and Law.

    The Athlete's Dilemma is the first in a proposed series of books on sports pathologies.

1/27/2018 General OneFile - Saved Articles
http://go.galegroup.com/ps/marklist.do?actionCmd=GET_MARK_LIST&userGroupName=schlager&inPS=true&prodId=ITOF&ts=1517109151777 1/1
Print Marked Items
The Athlete's Dilemma: Sacrificing Health
for Wealth and Fame
Publishers Weekly.
264.19 (May 8, 2017): p52.
COPYRIGHT 2017 PWxyz, LLC
http://www.publishersweekly.com/
Full Text:
The Athlete's Dilemma: Sacrificing Health for Wealth and Fame
John Weston Parry. Rowman & Littlefield, $36
(320p) ISBN 978-1-4422-7540-9
Parry (Mental Disability, Violence, Future Dangerousness), a lawyer with an expertise in mental health and
health law, has written an excellent volume on the "debilitating paradox" of popular spectator sports: that
"the overwhelming desire to attain the heightened fitness" required of an elite athlete leads children and
adults to pain, injuries, and "disability, addictions, and even premature deaths." Part I is a solid overview of
how the culture of "playing hurt" causes both athletes and the professional medical providers on sports
teams to reinforce a lifestyle that leads to injury. The second part of the book is an overview of the ways
professional, collegiate, and Olympic sports organizations have ignored--and in many cases encouraged--
the use of performance-enhancing drugs. In the final section, Parry takes a hard look at how "bad practices
and lack of candor at the professional level" regarding the consequences of sports-related impairments such
as CTE (chronic traumatic encephalopathy) have filtered down "to collegiate, scholastic, and youth sports
programs in very unhealthy ways." Parry has written a highly detailed work that should be read by athletes,
managers, and sports administrators at all levels. (June)
Source Citation (MLA 8th
Edition)
"The Athlete's Dilemma: Sacrificing Health for Wealth and Fame." Publishers Weekly, 8 May 2017, p. 52.
General OneFile, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A491949123/ITOF?
u=schlager&sid=ITOF&xid=9729b8af. Accessed 27 Jan. 2018.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A491949123

"The Athlete's Dilemma: Sacrificing Health for Wealth and Fame." Publishers Weekly, 8 May 2017, p. 52. General OneFile, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A491949123/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=ITOF. Accessed 27 Jan. 2018.
  • Broadway World
    https://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwbooks/article/Athletes-Sacrificing-Health-for-Wealth-and-Fame-New-Book-Proves-Its-Far-More-Than-Concussions-in-Football-20170620

    Word count: 584

    Athletes Sacrificing Health for Wealth and Fame': New Book Proves It's Far More Than Concussions in Football
    Books News Desk Jun. 20, 2017
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    'Athletes Sacrificing Health for Wealth and Fame': New Book Proves It's Far More Than Concussions in Football Football, hockey, baseball, basketball, soccer, Olympic sports, tennis, and golf place elite athletes at heightened risks for mental and physical impairments, addictions, and substance abuse. Professional leagues, colleges, and Olympic organizations do little to intervene, either while these modern-day gladiators compete or once their careers are over. Sports enterprises look the other way or pretend these health risks do not exist or are less serious than medical experts warn. The NFL, MLB, NCAA, NHL, IOC, USOC, and FIFA, in particular, are much more concerned with profits and wealth than the long-term welfare of elite athletes and the youngsters who jeopardize their bodies and minds trying to become elite.

    "The Athlete's Dilemma: Sacrificing Health for Wealth and Fame" (Rowman & Littlefield, June 2017) (hardback, 364 pp) by John Weston Parry examines health risks in the sports Americans (and Europeans) most like to watch and play. The book provides reasonable options that athletes, parents, educators, health providers, policy makers, and legislators can embrace without increasing subsidies, which federal and state governments already devote to these sports. As Parry explains, "if the money the public pays to professional leagues, universities and colleges, and Olympic organizers to build extravagant facilities for sporting events were used to protect athletes, many - and perhaps most - of these health risks could be substantially reduced. Too many of our favorite spectator sports are needlessly and/or recklessly dangerous."

    "The Athlete's Dilemma" consists of 24 chapters divided into four parts:

    -Pain, Injuries, Drugs, and Team Doctors
    -Performance Enhancing Substances: The Perilous Search for the Holy Grail
    -Physical and Mental Impairments
    -Why Elite Athletes Sacrifice Their Health

    A conclusion sets out substantial organizational changes to better protect athletes' health.

    The early reviews are unanimous that "The Athlete's Dilemma" should be widely read:

    Publishers Weekly ("an excellent volume…[that] should be read by athletes, managers, and sports administrators at all levels.")

    Fred Bowen, Kids Washington Post ("John Parry asks hard questions about… performance-enhancing drugs, concussions, and how professional athletes and big-time college players are treated.")

    Harold J. Bursztajn M.D., neuro-psychiatric expert and Associate Professor Harvard Medical School ("a wonderfully readable tour de force… on the dangers of athletic cutthroat competition.")

    Ken Reed, Sports Policy Director, League of Fans ("The Athlete's Dilemma builds a compelling case that numerous health-related crises are impacting athletes.")

    Mark H. Anshel, Professor Emeritus, Middle Tennessee State University ("an insightful and revealing expose about … [the] treatment of athletes during and after their sports careers.")

    Parry is a lawyer, author, and host of a website and blog: sportpathologies.com. As the former director of the American Bar Association's Commission on Disability Rights, he has written and edited numerous books and articles on mental disability and health law, diversity, and the rights of persons with disabilities. He also is a recipient of the Manfred Guttmacher Award from the American Psychiatric Association and the American Academy of Psychiatry and Law.

    "The Athlete's Dilemma" is available in hardback ($36) or as an ebook ($34) from Rowman & Littlefield Publishers: https://rowman.com/ISBN/9781442275409/The-Athlete's-Dilemma-Sacrificing-Health-for-Wealth-and-Fame. For more information, please contact John Parry or go to sportpathologies.com/book. 0