The ISSF recognizes that in order for all Athletes to give the very best of themselves in order to achieve greatness, they often find themselves in need of mental health support.
Mental Health Topics include, but are not limited to:
The ISSF is committed to helping to create a sport environment that helps support all ISSF Athletes’ well being and mental health.
To this end, we endorse the great work that has already been done by the International Olympic Committee and we offer as a resource to all our Athletes and their support team the IOC Tool Kit on Mental Health.
You can access it here:
The Toolkit for Mental Health in Elite Athletes has proven to be a valuable resource for many Olympic Movement Stakeholders and we trust that it will also be a great resource for all shooting sport athletes, their parents and their medical support teams and health care professionals.
All athletes, coaches, Member Federations, and members of medical and health care support teams are encouraged to carefully read the Tool Kit. ISSF is confidence that it will prove to be a valuable resource for all of you to benefit the health and mental well-being of all athletes.
As you will see,
IOC Mental Health in Elite Athletes Toolkit
the Tool Kit is divided into four main sections:
You can access it here Mental-Health-Action-Plan-2023 (olympics.com)
In July 2023, the IOC communicated that it had developed a new Mental Health Action Plan that takes a wider approach to supporting the protection and promotion of athlete mental well-being.
The IOC Mental Health Action plan looks to inspire, encouraging and assist stakeholders like the ISSF build a healthier world in and through sport.
Key targets for 2026
Guided by the principles of human rights, equity, evidence-based practice and working collaboratively, the Mental Health Action Plan is a comprehensive strategy that will serve as a roadmap for the IOC to promote mental well-being across its four spheres of responsibility – the IOC as an organisation, the IOC as the owner of the Olympic Games, the IOC as the leader of the Olympic Movement, and Olympism in society.
Across the four spheres, there are five thematic focus areas, with corresponding key objectives and actions, to be achieved by the end of 2026:
The ISSF will of course follow the IOC’s guidance in this regard and ensure that before 2026 all of the required ISSF benchmarks in relation to the mental health action plan will be satisfied.