• Keep up to date with Ausbb via Twitter and Facebook. Please add us!
  • Join the Ausbb - Australian BodyBuilding forum

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.

    The Ausbb - Australian BodyBuilding forum is dedicated to no nonsense muscle and strength building. If you need advice that works, you have come to the right place. This forum focuses on building strength and muscle using the basics. You will also find that the Ausbb- Australian Bodybuilding Forum stresses encouragement and respect. Trolls and name calling are not allowed here. No matter what your personal goals are, you will be given effective advice that produces results.

    Please consider registering. It takes 30 seconds, and will allow you to get the most out of the forum.

Steroids slowly killing the gym-obsessed youth

Admin

Administrator. Graeme
Staff member
677489-639cd250-bad3-11e3-9580-78f49dffd642.jpg

Oli Cooney suffered strokes and heart attacks but couldn’t stop working out. Source: Snapper Media

OLI Cooney was 20 years old and obsessed with working out.

The young man from West Yorkshire, UK, was similar to so many Australian gym junkies, devoting hours to his physique.
678006-605d67bc-bad3-11e3-9580-78f49dffd642.jpg

He worked out until his death four years later. Source: Snapper Media



677632-61cb01b8-bad3-11e3-9580-78f49dffd642.jpg

A young Oli, at 16, who was never happy with his body. Source: Snapper Media



Unfortunately, this led him to begin injecting anabolic steroids to reach his ideal body weight.
Mr Cooney, who started training at the age of 16, suffered two heart attacks and three strokes but ignored repeated warnings to stop his hardcore exercise regime.
After being diagnosed with chronic heart damage he continued to train while telling his family he was “invincible and limitless”. By this stage he was in severe denial, had weakness down one side of his body and his speech had been affected.
On September 22, 2013, Mr Cooney collapsed at a friend’s house after a night out and died in hospital.
His death has been officially attributed to substance abuse this week at an inquest in Bradford, West Yorkshire.

677667-6238f358-bad3-11e3-9580-78f49dffd642.jpg

His parents have warned steroids can kill. Source: Snapper Media



Assistant Bradford Coroner Dr Dominic Bell said: “He had this weakness that he was driven to alter his body image to become more confident in society.”
“For most people what had already happened to him would have been a wake-up call but he was not willing to listen to or learn from the heart professionals.”

677747-60de7ef6-bad3-11e3-9580-78f49dffd642.jpg

Men aged just above 30 are the most at risk. Source: Snapper Media



Doctors in Australia have also raised concerns about the impact of steroid use.
Dr Steve Hambleton, the head of the Australian Medical Association, said steroids are the country’s fastest growing injectable drug.
“We are worried because steroids can be sourced from anywhere,” he said. “They can have all sorts of side effects and affect everywhere in the body.”
Dr Hambleton said gym culture, “perfect body image” and sales and marketing campaigns all contributed to steroids’ popularity.
He said doctors are worried about female body image, but we should be worried about men too.

678200-63227258-bad3-11e3-9580-78f49dffd642.jpg

If the steroid culture in Sydney doesn’t change, more men could end up dead. Source: Snapper Media



The negative side effects of inappropriate steroid use also include aggression, skin changes, hair growth, testicular atrophy and the development of liver cancers.
In Mr Cooper’s case the use of steroids led to him suffering heart attacks and stroke.
The injectable drug is becoming more common in Australia, with detections of steroids at the border skyrocketing from 1038 in 2010-11 to 6126 in 2011-2012, according to the Australian Crime Commission.
Many Australians have died from anabolic steroid use. For instance, 24 New South Wales residents died from anabolic steroid use between 1996 and 2012, according to the state’s Department of Forensic Medicine. All of them were men with an average age of 31.7.

678254-6294546e-bad3-11e3-9580-78f49dffd642.jpg

Oli’s mother and grand parents want others to think of the dangers. Source: Snapper Media



Mr Cooney’s devastated parents want to warn others that steroids can kill.
His mother, Sarah Cooney said: “Oli was driven by a passion for bodybuilding and unfortunately it was that passion that took his life. We would not want anyone to go through the hell we have been through. We will never move on from this.”

http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/fitness/steroids-slowly-killing-the-gymobsessed-youth/story-fnlsv23r-1226873678282
 
I always find these funny. Firstly that 24 deaths in NSW in the last 16 years while sad is hardly an out of control problem.

Secondly androgens are a relatively low toxicity drug.

But to address the moral issue. It's obviously really bad for people to take drugs to look better, yet it's empowering for people to have many forms of cosmetic surgery for everything, fat loss, bolt ons, even a sex change. This I don't understand.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
and so it begins. TBH I'm surprised the whole Zyzz thing didn't kick this BS off. Enjoy your newfound social stigma resident juicers! Wonder what this means for all the IFBB types lol.
 
yep its a bullshit article, but it's the latest in a trend of turning steroid users into the new social outcasts.
 
Isn't the article about a kid from the UK ?

It's a weak link to Australia.

yep, but its probably more of an indictment on Australia. The UK's Steroids should be a lot higher quality as they are usually Pharma grade @Genics ; were as a lot of Australia's is underground labs isn't it, which maybe less safe?
 
yep, but its probably more of an indictment on Australia. The UK's Steroids should be a lot higher quality as they are usually Pharma grade @Genics ; were as a lot of Australia's is underground labs isn't it, which maybe less safe?

Yeah lots of Oz gear is bunk or underdosed. Well said Stu Poo.
 
Kid prob's had an underlying heart condition which would have meant he had no business running gear in the 1st place.

This coupled with the possibility he was running eccy's as Darkos pointed out or some kind of speed/meth would have been enough to push him over for sure.
 
true, but I knew one massive dude who was clean besides steroids who got a severely large heart.

That was from high dose though.
 
Youre right mate.
Compare that to the amount of deaths directly caused from smoking! And you can buy cigarettes at every corner shop.

I always find these funny. Firstly that 24 deaths in NSW in the last 16 years while sad is hardly an out of control problem.

Secondly androgens are a relatively low toxicity drug.

But to address the moral issue. It's obviously really bad for people to take drugs to look better, yet it's empowering for people to have many forms of cosmetic surgery for everything, fat loss, bolt ons, even a sex change. This I don't understand.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Top