Young Women's Health Garden City KS

Breast development begins a series of dramatic physical and mental changes that lead to sexual maturity. While the physical changes are well-noted--especially by fellow classmates-'the significant changes that take place within the brain during puberty often go unremarked.

Surendra Kumar Verma
(620) 272-2102
410 E Spruce St
Garden City, KS
Specialty
Radiation Oncology

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Southeast Kansas Internal Medicine
(620) 251-2400
1501 West 4th St
Coffeyville, KS
Specialty
Rural Health Clinic

Marion County Family Physicians
(620) 924-5213
206 E First Pob 37
Lincolnville, KS
Specialty
Rural Health Clinic

Hodgeman County Clinic
(620) 357-6411
810 Bramley
Jetmore, KS
Specialty
Rural Health Clinic

Hoxie Medical Clinic
(785) 675-3018
826 Eighteenth St
Hoxie, KS
Specialty
Rural Health Clinic

Surendra Verma
(603) 357-3411
410 E Spruce St
Garden City, KS
Associated Hospitals
Cancer Ctr St Catherine Hosp

Hiawatha Community Hosp Family Practic
(785) 742-2161
314 Oregon Street
Hiawatha, KS
Specialty
Rural Health Clinic

Chetopa Medical Center
(620) 236-7322
507 Maple Box 285
Chetopa, KS
Specialty
Rural Health Clinic

St Joseph Health Clinic
(620) 285-6400
923 Carroll
Larned, KS
Specialty
Rural Health Clinic

Altamont Community Health Center
(620) 784-5318
405 Huston Pob 606
Altamont, KS
Specialty
Rural Health Clinic

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Causes and Affects of Early Puberty

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By Stacy Malkan

Lipstick, eyeliner, mascara, perfume—Jessica Assaf applied them all, and more, before she hit 12. And by her mid teens, she estimates she was using 15 to 20 beauty products a day. Like many girls, Assaf was indoctrinated into the beauty culture at a young age, with makeover-themed birthday parties as early as kindergarten and trips to the nail salon starting in grade school.

“I remember the coolest thing growing up was Hard Candy nail polish with the ring on the bottle. I really wanted that ring,” Assaf says. “The companies do a really good job of trying to attract younger girls.”

Indeed. Consider the Hannah Montana Backstage Makeover Set, targeting 3- to 7-year-olds; Barbie Makeup games; and spa services with names like “Twinkle Toes and Fancy Fingers” that offer manicures and facials to girls from age 6 to 11. Popular hair-straightening products called “Just For Me!” feature 7-year-old girls on the box. Getting your hair colored is now practically a rite of passage in middle school.

“Five years ago, the rule of thumb was 15- to 16-year-olds would come in for their first color. Now, that girl is 10,” Gordon Miller, a spokesman for the National Cosmetology Association, told The New York Times. The trend, he said, represents a “lucrative niche market” for the beauty industry.

Early Puberty Not So Pretty
But this rush to cosmetic beauty also represents something else—increased exposure to toxic chemicals. Many scientists now suspect that these toxins, found in many of the cosmetics for which young girls clamor, contribute to another disturbing trend: Research shows that girls in the US, especially African-American girls, are entering puberty earlier than their grandmothers did. In fact, half of all American girls now show signs of breast development by the age of 10—one to two years earlier than 40 years ago—and a significant number show signs as early as age 8 or 9.

Breast development begins a series of dramatic physical and mental changes that lead to sexual maturity. While the physical changes are well-noted—especially by fellow classmates—the significant changes that take place within the brain during puberty often go unremarked. The brain, for example, in order to accommodate new powers of abstract thinking and adult socialization behaviors, becomes less flexible. But as that happens, it becomes harder to learn complex skills such as playing a musical instrument, speaking a foreign language, or mastering a sport.

“Girls now have, on average, a year and a half less to learn these things,” says Sandra Steingraber, PhD, biologist and author of a paper that discusses the research on puberty. “Over the course of just a few decades, the childhoods of US girls have been significantly shortened. This has huge implications.”

And the implications extend far beyond learning skills. Girls who enter puberty earlier are at higher risk for breast cancer and depression, and are more likely to engage in high-risk behaviors such ...

Author: Stacy Malkan

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