Confederations that have an agreement with WADA
can access the ADAMS system (view only).
The objective of the Information System
developed in this project, called the System for
Doping Control (SCDP, in Portuguese), is to support
anti-doping measures, thereby complementing
ADAMS, by providing functionalities that ADAMS
does not have. SCDP sets out to be active
throughout the doping control process. These
include functionalities to purchase doping kits, to
select the athletes to be tested, to complete the
doping form, to detail the results, and to initiate
hearings and pass sentences when tests are positive.
The scope of ADAMS, for the confederations, is
restricted to consulting the results of the tests
conducted by accredited laboratories.
Currently, when undertaken, doping control is
performed independently by each sports
organization (confederation, association, etc.) with
the support of spreadsheets and documents but there
is no database and no support from any software. In
addition, there is no standardization between the
sports bodies. Thus, the regulators in Brazil do not
have a consolidated view of the process used. Nor is
there accurate, detailed and up-to-date information
about the tests that would enable a thorough analysis
of doping, for example, by region, sport, prohibited
substance or age group.
The Athlete Scholarship Program of the Brazil
(Bolsa Atleta, 2014) lays down the non-violation of
anti-doping rules as an additional requirement that
candidates for this award must meet and sets out
penalties for holders of this award who violate the
anti-doping rules. However, due to there being no
automated and centralized control, this Program
does not hold up-to-date information on positive
tests. Therefore, it is dependent on information that
it obtains from the press, based on accusations, or
from the Confederations. Figure 1 shows the context
in which the SCDP project is placed.
Figure 1: Context of the Doping Control System.
3 METHODOLOGY USED
This section describes the methods and techniques
used to conduct this project.
3.1 Mapping the Doping Control of the
Sports Bodies
An exploratory study was conducted to answer the
following research question: How is doping control
currently being carried out by sports bodies? Two
university researchers conducted this activity.
Initially the team contacted the Confederations
based on contact information provided by COB. E-
mails were sent to all confederations. In addition,
some confederations were contacted by phone and
eight confederations were visited in person. The
techniques used for data collection were: i)
interviews and ii) analysis of documents. The
interviews were conducted at the headquarters of the
Confederations with the officials responsible for
doping control. The purpose of these interviews was
to understand the process that the Confederations
used and the difficulties they face. During the
interviews, documents were collected such as forms,
and test results. In addition, other documents
available on the Confederations’ websites were
analyzed. These included sentences passed at
hearings of athletes who were caught by the doping
tests. The analysis of the information collected at
this stage guided the next step, the purpose of which
was to develop the system to support the
Confederations as to doping control.
ABCD helped in this process by providing
information about the actions that it was conducting
with regard to doping control and to formalizing the
researchers’ role with the sports Confederations.
Several confederations were examined in this
process. However, since the Brazilian Athletics
Confederation (CBAT, in Portuguese) is the
exemplar model for Doping Control in Brazil, it was
used as the main source of information and to
validate the functionalities of the SCDP system.
3.2 Development Process
The Information System is being developed using
Scrum (
Schwaber, 1995), and follows PMBOK
(Project Management Body of Knowledge) practices
(PMI, 2013). An interactive and incremental
development process, called Business Requirement
Agile Process (BRAP) was used (Medeiros, 2015).
The process is divided into four sub-processes that
are repeated in each monthly cycle of development