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March 24/16 17:47 pm - Paving the Way: Kelly Anne Erdman


Posted by Editor on 03/24/16
 

The Canadian Sport Institute Calgary (CSI Calgary) congratulates Kelly Anne Erdman on her recent publication, an accomplishment she deems to be, "The greatest achievement of my career." Erdman has been a source of knowledge in Canadian athletes' lives for over two decades. Always up-to-date on cutting-edge research, Erdman has been a Performance Dietitian at the 2012 and 2014 Olympic Games as well as the 2011 Pan Am Games.

Erdman began working at the CSI Calgary in 1994, paving the way in the field of sports nutrition. An Olympian in track cycling, Erdman continues to be aligned with the CSI Calgary, working predominantly with the speed skating team and Hockey Canada as the lead dietitian for both the women's and sledge hockey programs and consulting with the men's team. She also consults with a variety of sports including luge, heptathlon, and nordic skiing.

For her recent publication, Erdman was hand-picked by Dietitians of Canada to be a co-author on the February 2016 position paper titled Nutrition and Athletic Performance: Position of Dietitians of Canada, the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics and the American College of Sports Medicine. The publication is an in-depth report on the role of nutrition as a critical piece of high performance sport and shares the authors' expertise by outlining evidence-based current recommendations for athletes' nutrition.

As one of three authors who spent a year and a half re-writing the paper based on current evidence, Erdman's co-authors were American D. Travis Thomas from the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics and Australian Louise M. Burke representing the American College of Sports Medicine. As science and sport are always evolving, this is the third time the paper has been re-written to update the information. Last published in 2011, the joint position paper will go through its next re-write in 2019.

Erdman says that this re-write is more focused on the need for athlete nutrition to be customized. She believes that it is critical for athletes and their support teams to be aware of how an athlete's nutrition needs vary on a daily basis. When asked the one piece of advice that she would give to her fellow Sport Dietitians, Erdman stresses that she believes in tailoring the message, customizing it for each athlete's needs.

Ultimately, it is evident that Erdman loves what she does and is an integral component to the success of Canada's athletes. While the CSI Calgary knows that Erdman is very deserving of this recognition, she humbly emphasizes, "It was a huge honour for me to represent sport dietitians in Canada, and I would not have been given the opportunity to work on this piece of literature had I not been affiliated with a high performance institute such as the CSI Calgary."

Courtesy SIRC

 


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