this post was submitted on 26 Dec 2023
1 points (100.0% liked)

freeforum

7 readers
1 users here now

The following are the rules of this room. Post anything, all are welcome. No one can kick your post here. Do what you like. @WiggleHard bans nothing and exiles nobody (Dont doxx communities users, no posting of porn/nudes or foot fetish material unless it involves political scandals, no ads for sex sites or dating sites; do that on your own time, no solicitation for pyramid scams, no posting job advertisements unless from official job sites, no posts supporting pedophilia, not all love is love) Please note this room is for everyone meaning both left, right and everyone in between can post here. Although im a right wing nationalist populist trump supporter i allow anyone to say and post anything as long as it doesn’t break my rooms rules or the website rules. 2)content creators, podcasters, blog writers can post and self promote here, just don’t complain to me if no one likes your stuff. 3) opinions on hot button issues like race, religion, gander ect. Are allowed however, I am warning people, to be respectful of others feelings, and not be toxic. I have hosted this community format in the past, and understand that an open discussion format can sometimes lead to toxic discussion. That being said although I encourage debate, please keep personal attacks to a minimum. Also try to make fact-based arguments. Any questions or concerns please feel free to send me a direct message

founded 10 months ago
MODERATORS
 

“How is her body older than her actual age?” Benton remembers asking. At the teacher’s suggestion, Benton took the girl to see her local doctor in Ashtabula, Ohio.

At the time, Benton had never heard of precocious puberty. Having grown up in the Black community, where early puberty rates are among the highest in the U.S., Benton had known 7- and 8-year-old girls who’d had their periods or needed bras. But nobody in Benton’s family realized there was an actual medical diagnosis, or that prescription hormone treatments called puberty blockers could help slow the physical changes, if needed.

“Girls were just called ‘fast’ or ‘too mature for their age,’” Benton said. “I now understand they were struggling with precocious puberty.”

With puberty beginning at younger ages, especially among young Black girls, doctors say there’s an urgent need for greater awareness and education among families who may face hurdles in access to diagnosis and medical care.

In a 2022 article in the journal Pediatrics, researchers warned that biases in early puberty care had tremendous implications for the physical and emotional health of Black children.

“Although … race-based medicine is faulty and detrimental, its eradication from everyday practice remains a challenge,” pediatricians from the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University wrote.

no comments (yet)
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
there doesn't seem to be anything here