Third of Swedish Cheerleaders Report Psychological Abuse

Linköping University

Of current and former cheerleading athletes in Sweden, 29% reported being subjected to psychological abuse in the sport, according to a new study from Linköping University, Sweden. The study shows that dissatisfaction with leadership, injuries, high expectations and bad atmosphere in the team are major reasons why athletes give up the sport.

"It's similar to what we see in other sports: that it's primarily psychological abuse that stands out," says Carolina Lundqvist, docent in psychology and sports science and licensed psychotherapist at the Department of Behavioural Sciences at Linköping University.

In a survey, 211 active and 73 former competitive athletes from 15 years and older answered questions about psychological, physical and sexual abuse in the sport as well as about their own health. As far as is known, this is the first time in the world that such a study has been conducted on cheerleading. The study was funded by the Swedish Cheerleading Federation and published in the Journal of Sports Sciences.

Cheerleading is growing rapidly in Sweden. There are about 18,000 practitioners, many of whom are children and young people.

"But we have a problem of athletes quitting in the upper secondary school age group. We wanted to investigate why and bring about a change," says Katarina Eriksson, general secretary of the Swedish Cheerleading Federation.

The most common reason was experience of psychological abuse. This could involve being frozen out of the community, diminished or devalued, being manipulated or experiencing threats. The severity of the abuse experienced was not measured in this study.

The second most common reason for quitting was that athletes experienced a lack of support when someone in a position of responsibility knew of harassment or abuse but took no action. About 5 per cent of current and 27 per cent of former athletes reported that they had experienced this.

The consequence may be that the athlete retires prematurely. More than 35 per cent of former athletes reported that they had quit because of their coaches' leadership and 34 per cent gave injuries as the reason. 27 per cent reported high expectations as the cause and 22 per cent poor team cohesion and atmosphere.

Previous research shows that it is often only after their career that athletes talk about various forms of abuse. According to Carolina Lundqvist, this may be because attitudes and behaviours are normalised in sports environments and that it is only afterwards that they realise what they have actually been through. The athlete may also be worried about becoming even more vulnerable if they speak out about abuse.

The results of the study point to the importance of educating leaders at all levels and actively working with initiatives that ensure that sports environments are safe, healthy and nurturing.

"I think old norms and an attitude that puts performance before health are what's getting in the way," says Carolina Lundqvist.

The Swedish Cheerleading Federation has now begun work on developing training courses for coaches and has already drawn up a new code of conduct for leaders. Since many in the study indicated injuries as a reason for quitting, the federation wants to increase coaches' knowledge of how training can be conducted to prevent injuries.

The survey was sent to around 800 active or formerly active athletes in October and November 2023. The response rate was just over 35 per cent.

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