| Doctors and athletes aren't quite comparable. For doctors, brain drugs → knowledge → saving lives. For athletes, body drugs → strength → showing off. "Showing off" isn't really something we require much of in society, or see as a moral good (however entertaining we happen to find it when it is done well.) "Saving lives" is something we want to happen as much as possible, to the point that we might be willing to ask the people doing so to harm themselves a bit to get it done. A better comparison to doctors might be, say, firefighters: body drugs → strength → saving lives. Would it make sense for a firefighter to take anabolic steroids if it increased the maximum weight they could lift-and-carry out of a burning building? I don't know. I don't think there's an automatic answer to that. |
Similarly, a firefighter who does steroids might be better until he dies of a heart attack at an inopportune time causing additional deaths. But the real risk as far as I am concerned is that if the steroids are allowed and the tests are standard, then his eventual choice is to take steroids or not be a firefighter. Play that out enough and you have a doped out society that is quantitatively better on what you choose to measure, but highly toxic, needing bail outs for long term side effects, and making short term labor discounts until you figure out where the no free lunch thereom has stashed the harm.