Researchers analyzed data on puberty timing and adolescent
depression for almost 5,800 children born in Hong Kong in 1997.
For boys, the timing of genital development was unrelated to the
presence of depression, researchers report in the journal
Pediatrics.
But with girls, each one-year increase in age at the time of breast
development was associated with 17 percent lower odds of depression,
the study found.
“Breast development in girls is more obvious than genital
development in boys,” said senior study author Mary Schooling, a
researcher at the University of Hong Kong and the CUNY School of
Public Health and Health Policy in New York.
“Breast development in girls may relate more strongly to looking
grown-up and a change to a more grown-up social role, which is
difficult to cope with,” Schooling said by email.
To understand the link between puberty timing and teen depression,
the researchers reviewed health records on children’s genital
development and data from questionnaires on depression that
participants and their parents completed when teens were almost 14
years old on average.
Overall, girls in the study typically started developing breasts
around age 9 and pubic hair close to age 11.
For boys, genital development happened around age 11 and pubic hair
typically arrived around age 12.
One limitation of the study is its reliance on data from voluntary
annual health check-ups to assess puberty timing, the authors note.
They also lacked data on stressful circumstances in teens’ lives
that might influence the timing of puberty and depressive symptoms.
Even so, the results are in line with earlier research on puberty
timing and depression risk, said Dr. Carolyn McCarty, a pediatrics
and psychology researcher at the University of Washington and
Seattle Children’s Research Institute who wasn’t involved in the
study.
“This study is largely consistent with a broader literature
indicating that girls who undergo puberty early are at a higher risk
for a number of behavioral health issues, including eating
disorders,” McCarty said by email.
“The increased risk of depression associated with early development
does not appear to hold for boys, which could be due to biological
differences in the pubertal process, or the fact that the physical
maturation of boys is generally considered a socially positive
experience,” McCarty added.
[to top of second column] |
The timing of menstruation, which wasn’t a focus of the study, may
also influence mental health for teen girls, said Dr. Paul Kaplowitz,
an endocrinologist at Children’s National Health System in
Washington, D.C. who wasn’t involved in the study.
“Girls who start puberty and have periods more than two years early
often, but not always, have concerns about looking and feeling
different from other girls and are not ready to deal with the
hygiene aspects of menstrual flow,” Kaplowitz said by email.
The results for girls in Hong Kong might not apply to other parts of
the world, however.
“There may be a cultural context to this finding which was reported
in Hong Kong Chinese girls,” Kaplowitz added.
Puberty is considered normal if it starts after age 8 in girls and
age 9 in boys, said Dr. Joyce Lee, a pediatric endocrinologist at
Mott Children’s Hospital and the University of Michigan in Ann
Arbor.
“We can’t control the timing of puberty in kids, but we do know that
excess weight is associated with an earlier onset of puberty in
girls,” Lee, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by email. “It is
important for parents to help their children maintain a healthy
weight."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1TLyqDs Pediatrics, online May 26, 2016.
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |