When girls come in for  their physical exams, one of the questions I routinely ask is “Do you  get your period?” I try to ask before I expect the answer to be yes, so  that if a girl doesn’t seem to know about the changes of puberty that  lie ahead, I can encourage her to talk about them with her mother, and  offer to help answer questions. And I often point out that even those  who have not yet embarked on puberty themselves are likely to have  classmates who are going through these changes, so, again, it’s  important to let kids know that their questions are welcome, and will be  answered accurately.
But like everybody  else who deals with girls, I’m aware that this means bringing up the  topic when girls are pretty young. Puberty is now coming earlier for many girls, with bodies changing in the third and fourth grade, and there is a complicated discussion about  the reasons, from obesity and family stress to chemicals in the  environment that may disrupt the normal effects of hormones. I’m not  going to try to delineate that discussion here — though it’s an  important one — because I want to concentrate on the effect, rather than  the cause, of reaching puberty early.
A large study published in May in the journal Pediatrics looked at a group of 8,327  children born in Hong Kong in April and May of 1997, for whom a great  deal of health data has been collected. The researchers had access to  the children’s health records, showing how their doctors had documented  their physical maturity, according to what are known as the Tanner  stages, for the standardized pediatric index of sexual maturation.
Before children enter  puberty, we call it Tanner I; for girls, Tanner II is the beginning of  breast development, while for boys, it’s the enlargement of the scrotum  and testes and the reddening and changing of the scrotum skin. Boys and  girls then progress through the intermediate changes to stage V, full  physical maturity.
In this study, the  researchers looked at the relationship between the age at which children  moved from Tanner I to Tanner II — that is, the age at which the  physical beginnings of puberty were noticed — and the likelihood of  depression in those children when they were 12 to 15 years old, as  detected on a screening questionnaire.
“What we found was the  girls who had earlier breast development had a higher risk of  depressive symptoms, or more depressive symptoms,” said Dr. C. Mary  Schooling, an epidemiologist who is a professor at the City University  of New York School of Public Health, and was the senior author on the  study. “We didn’t see the same thing for boys.” Earlier onset of breast  development in girls was associated with a higher risk of depression in  early adolescence even after controlling for many other factors,  including socioeconomic status, weight or parents’ marital status.
Other studies,  including in the United States, have shown this same pattern, with girls  who begin developing earlier than their peers vulnerable to depression  in adolescence. Some studies have found this in boys, though it’s not as  clear. But there is concern that girls whose development starts earlier  than their peers are at risk in a number of ways, and across different  cultural backgrounds.
“Early puberty is a  challenge and a stress, and it’s associated with more than depression,”  said Dr. Jane Mendle, a clinical psychologist in the department of human  development at Cornell University. She named anxiety, disordered eating  and self-injury as some of the risks for girls. In her studies of  puberty, she has found associations between early development and  depression in both genders in New York children. In boys, the tempo of puberty was significant, as well as the timing;  boys who moved more rapidly from one Tanner stage to the next were at  higher risk and the increased depression risk seemed to be related to  changes in their peer relationships.
Before puberty, Dr.  Mendle said, depression occurs at roughly the same rate in both sexes,  but by the midpoint of puberty, girls are two and a half times more  likely to be depressed than boys.
Some of these children  may already be at risk; Dr. Mendle said that early puberty is more  common in children who have grown up in circumstances of adversity, in  poverty, in the foster care system. But some of it is heredity and some  of it is body type and some of it, probably, is chance.
Researchers have  wondered about hormonal associations with depression; Dr. Schooling  pointed out that their study found that depression was associated with  early breast development, controlled by estrogens, but not with early  pubic hair development, controlled by androgens. “There is no physical  factor that we know about that would explain this; estrogen has been  eliminated as a driver of depression in earlier research,” she said in  an email. “We probably need to explore social factors to seek an  explanation.” They also plan to follow up with their study population at  age 17.
The biological  transition of puberty, of course, occurs in a social and cultural  context. One very important effect of developing early, Dr. Mendle said,  is that it changes the way that people treat you, from your peers to  the adults in your life to strangers. “When kids navigate puberty they  start to look different,” she said. “It can be hard for them to maintain  friendships with kids who haven’t developed, and we also know that  early maturing girls are more likely to be harassed and victimized by other kids in their grade.”
Parents should be  aware of the difficulties that children may experience if they start  puberty earlier than their peers, but lots of children handle early  development with resiliency, and even pride.
Children who start  puberty early – say, 8 instead of 12 — are faced with handling those  physical changes while they are more childlike in their knowledge and  their cognitive development, and in their emotional understanding of  what goes on around them.
Parents should keep in  mind that the same protective factors that help children navigate other  challenges of growing up are helpful here: All children do better when  they have good relationships with their parents, and when they feel  connected at school. And we should be talking about the changes to their  bodies before they happen, and make it clear that all of these topics  are open for discussion
Fact: Early Puberty in Girls Raises the Risk of Depression
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