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Reaching
Puberty
Early
newamericamedia.org
JUST AFTER
MY DAUGHTER
TURNED 7,
she came to
me and
nervously
announced
that she had
bumps on her
chest. I
felt beneath
her nipples,
and, indeed,
there were
prominent,
hard lumps.
A friend had
gone through
this with
her
7-year-old,
so my first
fleeting
panic about
cancer was
replaced by
the alarming
realization
that my
little girl
was
developing
breasts. I
made an
appointment
with our
family
doctor, but
it was two
weeks off.
In the
meantime, I
googled
“premature
puberty” and
discovered
the
literature
on
environmental
causes of
early
puberty. I
also found
that family
history,
prenatal and
early
postnatal
exposures
were key. I
had adopted
my daughter
when she was
3 months
old. While I
knew she’d
never been
breastfed, I
knew little
else about
her history
or that of
her
birthmother.
I set out to
find out
everything I
could about
early
puberty in
girls,
trolling
through the
medical
literature,
gleaning
library
shelves,
exploring
the websites
of
environmental
organizations
and
conversing
with
scientists
who are
grappling
with this
issue.
Why was I so
alarmed
about my
Black
daughter
starting
puberty at
the age of
7? As a
white mom
who first
menstruated
at 13, I was
afraid of
the prospect
of my child
dealing with
sexuality at
such a young
age. My fear
increased as
I found
studies
showing a
litany of
social risks
for girls
who mature
early: poor
self-esteem,
increased
depression,
early sexual
intercourse
and
increased
drug and
alcohol use
and abuse.
Most
worrisome to
me were the
increased
health risks
associated
with early
puberty:
breast
cancer, type
II diabetes,
cardiovascular
disease and
polycystic
ovarian
syndrome.
Early-maturing
girls reach
their adult
height
early, and
if this
occurs by
age 12, they
have a
significant
risk of
getting a
very
aggressive
form of
breast
cancer. I
knew that I
had to take
action.
Why was I so
alarmed
about my
Black
daughter
starting
puberty at
the age of
7?One of the
first
discoveries
I made was
that girls
were having
different
experiences
with puberty
based on
race. A 1997
study,
conducted at
pediatricians’
offices
nationwide,
found that
girls were
showing the
first signs
of puberty
about a year
earlier than
was
considered
normal. Most
striking was
that Black
girls were
beginning
puberty
about a year
earlier than
white girls.
Compared
with
8-year-old
white girls,
about four
times as
many Black
8-year-olds
grow pubic
hair and
develop
breast buds.
The age when
girls get
their first
periods has
also dropped
(though less
dramatically)
over the
past 30
years, and
Black girls
precede
white girls
by half a
year in this
regard.
Dr. Paul
Kaplowitz of
the
Children’s
National
Medical
Center in
Washington,
D.C., has
suggested
that genetic
differences
between
Black and
white people
may explain
early
puberty in
Black girls.
He wonders
if the genes
involved in
insulin
resistance,
which occurs
more often
in Black
people, may
predispose
Black girls
to earlier
puberty by
affecting
their
hormone
levels.
However, in
1944, girls
of both
races
started
puberty at
the same
age. Today,
girls from
well-off
Black
families in
South Africa
and Cameroon
get their
first
periods at
least one
year later
than Black
girls in the
United
States, and
Kenyan Black
girls
menstruate
four years
later, on
average,
than Black
girls here.
Doctors have
suggested
that the
dramatic
rise in
childhood
obesity has
contributed
to earlier
puberty. We
know that
being fat
increases
the estrogen
in a girl’s
body, and
estrogen is
the chief
trigger for
breast
budding. At
every age,
the
percentage
of Black
girls who
are
overweight
is
significantly
higher than
that of
white girls.
However,
researchers
have
concluded
that, while
obesity
plays a
role, it is
not the only
cause of
early
puberty. My
daughter,
for example,
is very
thin, so
obesity
wasn’t even
a possible
culprit in
her case.
When I began
looking into
environmental
causes,
however, a
clearer
picture
began
forming. Dr.
Sandra
Steingraber,
author of
the Breast
Cancer
Fund’s
comprehensive
2007 report
“The Falling
Age of
Puberty in
U.S. Girls”
considers
early
puberty to
be “an
ecological
disorder”
resulting
from a
complex web
of
environmental
influences.
Pollutants,
plastics and
chemicals
may be the
hidden
causes of
early
puberty in
girls, and
Black girls
seem to be
more
vulnerable.
When I
discovered
my
daughter’s
breast buds,
I emptied my
house of
plastic
water
bottles and
stopped
letting her
eat school
lunches that
are heated
in plastic.
I did this
just on a
hunch. With
great
relief, I
watched her
breast buds
recede over
the next
month. In
fact, by the
time she saw
the doctor
two weeks
later, her
breast buds
had shrunk
to the point
that he was
unimpressed.
A friend
whose
daughter
sprouted
pubic hair
at the age
of 6 and a
half tossed
out all of
the plastic
in her house
and had the
satisfaction
of watching
the pubic
hair vanish.
These
anecdotes
are not
backed by
hard
statistics,
because
studies in
this area
have yet to
be
prioritized,
but they fit
perfectly
with what
we’ve
recently
learned
about
plastics.
Polycarbonate
plastics
(imprinted
with a
number 7)
are made
hard and
durable by
bisphenol A,
or BPA, one
of the most
abundant
synthetic
chemicals
nowadays.
More than
six billion
pounds of
BPA are
produced in
the United
States each
year. It is
in so many
products
that it is
impossible
to name them
all, but
they include
dental
sealants and
fillings,
some food
containers,
80 percent
of food can
liners and
many water
bottles. BPA
also leaches
from
landfills
into
groundwater
and is found
in indoor
air. A 2008
report by
the Centers
for Disease
Control
showed that
93 percent
of people
randomly
tested had
BPA in their
urine, but
the highest
levels were
found in
Blacks,
women, young
children and
poor people.
When I
discovered
my
daughter’s
breast buds,
I emptied my
house of
plastic
water
bottles and
stopped
letting her
eat school
lunches that
are heated
in
plastic.Most
baby bottles
are made of
polycarbonate
plastic. It
turns out
that 3.5 ppb
(parts per
billion) of
BPA leach
into milk
from new
baby bottles
and eight
times that
much from
worn and
heated
bottles.
Black babies
are
primarily
bottle-fed—only
5 percent of
Black women
breastfeed
exclusively
for the
first six
months of
their
babies’
lives, as
the World
Health
Organization
recommends.
Poor Black
women, in
particular,
are
discouraged
from
breastfeeding
by the free
formula
dispensed by
the Women
Infants and
Children
(WIC)
program.
Last year,
the federal
government
sponsored a
gathering of
38 medical
researchers
to determine
what effects
BPA has on
humans. The
group
reported
that BPA
acts the
same way in
humans as it
does in
animals and
the levels
in humans
are causing
negative
health
effects.
It’s
possible
that BPA
might be
contributing
to our
obesity
epidemic,
which is
already tied
to early
puberty.
Most
relevant to
us: the
scientists
concluded
that early
puberty is
directly
linked to
low-dose
exposure to
BPA.
Another
group of
synthetic
chemicals,
used to make
plastic
flexible,
has been
linked to
early breast
budding in
girls. These
chemicals,
called
phthalates,
are used to
make
polyvinyl
chloride, or
PVC,
(identified
by a number
3) which is
what many
water pipes
are made of.
They’re also
found in
food
wrappings,
the lining
of cardboard
boxes that
hold liquid
or fatty
foods,
medical
tubing,
time-release
capsules,
kids’ toys,
insect
repellents
and
countless
personal
care
products.
This last
category
includes
shampoo,
lotions and
deodorants.
The CDC
found that
phthalates
compose up
to 3 percent
of some of
these
products.
Women of
childbearing
age are the
group most
exposed to
phthalates.
Another way
we’re
exposed to
hormones, of
course, is
through our
diet. There
are six sex
and growth
hormones
permitted by
the Food and
Drug
Administration
in
commercial
beef cattle.
When people
eat beef,
they are
adding these
hormones to
their
systems. No
one knows if
eating
commercially
produced
beef plays a
role in
early
puberty, but
suspicion is
warranted.
•••
Black people
suffer
disproportionately
compared
with whites
in most
measures of
health in
the United
States, and
very early
puberty in
Black girls
joins this
alarmingly
long list.
Every risk
factor for
early
puberty
affects
Black girls
more than
white girls.
One way that
Black girls
are exposed
to even more
chemicals
than white
girls,
though, is
through the
heavy use of
hair care
products. In
1998, Dr.
Chandra
Tiwary
reported the
shocking
news that
four Black
girls, one
just
14-months-old,
had
developed
breasts or
pubic hair
after using
hormone-containing
hair
products.
The girls’
pubertal
symptoms
went away
when they
stopped
using the
hair
products. A
small 2002
study found
that, in
comparison
with white
families and
immigrant
African
families,
Black-American
parents used
hormone-containing
hair
products
about four
times more
frequently
on
themselves
and their
children.
When I
googled
“placenta
hair care,”
I found 95
products for
sale. The
placenta,
mostly
coming from
sheep, is a
hormone
factory,
producing
progestins,
estrogens
and growth
hormones in
abundance.
Even if a
family never
uses
personal
care
products
with animal
placenta or
hormones in
them,
regular hair
care
products are
loaded with
all sorts of
chemicals
that may
pose health
risks.
“Africa’s
Best Kids
Organics,
No-Lye
Organic
Conditioning
Relaxer
System with
ScalpGuard”
sounds safe,
doesn’t it?
The
Environmental
Working
Group has a
very
informative
website
called
Skin Deep
Cosmetic
Safety
Database
where it
rates the
safety of
thousands of
personal
care
products for
health
effects. One
of the
categories
is a
chemical’s
potential
for
disrupting
hormones.
Out of 78
hair
relaxers
rated by the
group,
Africa’s
Best is the
most
dangerous.
For those of
us who love
scents, it
is bad news
that Skin
Deep
red-flags
all
fragrances.
“Fragrance”
is a
catch-all
word for
4,000
different
chemicals,
and one
particular
fragrance in
a product
can contain
up to 40
chemicals.
Big
companies
reformulate
their
products as
often as
every three
months,
according to
an
Environmental
Working
Group
research
analyst,
making it
hard for
consumers to
keep up with
which
products are
safe.
Of the
approximately
100,000
synthetic
chemicals
permeating
our
environment,
10,000 of
them are
used in
personal
care
products,
and only
about 10
percent of
those have
been tested
for safety.
The federal
government
typically
relies on
chemical
manufacturers
to do their
own testing.
Each
chemical is
tested
alone,
although
humans are
exposed
every day to
hundreds of
chemicals
that have
interacting
effects. The
U.S.
government
does not
examine
whether
chemicals we
are exposed
to affect
our
hormones, so
we can’t
look to the
government
to find out
if everyday
products are
causing
girls to
reach
puberty
early.
Other
countries
have been
far more
proactive in
protecting
their
citizens.
The European
Union, for
example,
banned
phthalates
in cosmetics
in 2003 and
in
children’s
products in
2005. State
and local
governments
do better
than the
U.S.
government.
California
has banned
phthalates
in toys and
baby
products
starting in
2009, and
other states
are taking
steps to
follow its
lead. San
Francisco
passed a law
banning BPA
in toys and
kids’
products,
something
that even
Europe has
not done.
Even
individual
companies
are making
changes—Deep
Rock Water
Company in
Denver is
halting the
use of
polycarbonate
water jugs
because they
leach BPA.
My own
daughter,
who is now
almost 10,
remains
delightfully
flat-chested.
I pack her
school
lunches in
metal
thermoses
and metal
water
bottles. But
I cringe as
I watch her
classmates
line up for
school
lunches
heated in
plastic, and
eat and
drink food
carried from
home in
plastic
containers.
Some of the
girls have
already
grown
prominent
breasts and
with all
that I have
learned, I
am worried
about their
futures.
Susan H.
Shane is a
biologist
and mother.
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