
Girls who eat a healthy diet may be less likely to start puberty early, study suggests
Girls who grow up eating a healthier diet than their peers may be less likely to get their first menstrual periods at an earlier age — regardless of height or body mass index — a new study suggests.
Though previous research has tied height and BMI to the earlier onset of menarche, or first period, the study, published Tuesday in the journal Human Reproduction, claims to be the first to explore the biological milestone's link to specific diets.
Girls typically begin puberty — marked by acne, growth spurts, breast development and the growth of body and pubic hair — anywhere from ages 8 to 13, according to the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. They get their first periods roughly two years after their breasts start developing.
While precocious puberty, which is the onset of puberty in girls younger than 8 and boys younger than 9, affects just 1% of U.S. children, girls nationwide are getting their first periods earlier and earlier. The median age at menarche was 11.9 in 2013 through 2017, down from 12.1 in 1995, according to the National Center for Health Statistics.
Early menarche is more than untimely sexual maturity. Girls who get their periods younger than average are at increased risk of myriad medical problems throughout adolescence, such as depression, substance abuse and eating disorders. As adults, they have heightened odds of developing breast cancer, heart disease, obesity and other conditions.
To study the possible effects of diet on the age of a girl's first period, researchers at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle looked at the health records of more than 7,500 children ages 9 to 14 who had been enrolled in two waves of the Growing Up Today Study, from 1996 through 2001 and 2004 through 2008. As part of that study, the kids completed questionnaires about the foods they ate.
The researchers used two scales to gauge the girls' self-reported eating habits. One looked at how healthy a child's diet was, giving more points for healthier foods, such as legumes, whole grains and vegetables, and deducting points for less healthy foods, including red meat and products high in salt and trans fats. The second scale looked at how much people's diets contributed to inflammation, with foods such as refined grains, high-calorie drinks and red and processed meat considered more inflammatory.
The median age of participants' first periods was 13.1, the study found.
Girls who ate healthiest, the study estimated, were more likely to get their periods at a slightly older age than those who reported eating the least healthy diets. Similarly, girls who ate the highest amounts of inflammatory foods were more likely than those who ate the lowest amounts to get their first periods at a slightly younger age.
The study is observational, meaning it doesn't prove that a particular diet causes early periods but instead establishes a possible link. A major limitation of the study is that the majority of participants were white. Race and ethnicity are well-studied aspects of early menarche, with Black and Hispanic girls more likely to experience it.
What should girls eat to avoid early periods?
One hypothesis linking diet and age of first period, the authors wrote, is that the foods a person eats can affect levels of sex hormones in the body. A previous study of premenopausal women found that eating a healthier diet is linked to lower levels of certain sex hormones, including versions of estrogen. Inflammation has also been shown to have an effect on sex hormone levels.
Previous research has shown that excess fat, or adipose tissue, influences the hormone pathways that regulate puberty, said Erin Hennessy, director of the ChildObesity180 program at Tufts University, who wasn't part of the study.
'Adipose tissue produces certain hormones, including leptin, which send signals to the brain, and the thought is that higher levels of leptin among children with excess weight can trigger specific hormones that initiate puberty earlier,' Hennessy said in an email. 'Adipose tissue can also alter sex hormones, leading to higher estrogen levels that promote breast development and menarche onset.'
Diet alone doesn't determine the timing of a girl's first period. Genetics, environmental toxins, physical activity and socioeconomic status, among other factors, also play roles. Still, parents can support their children's overall health and well-being through nutrition, Hennessy said.
'The first strategy is to acknowledge that weight is one of many factors of health and should never be the sole focus,' Hennessy said. 'The second strategy is to take a family approach — everyone in the family can benefit from healthy eating.'
Third, Hennessy encourages parents to provide nutritional structure that isn't coercive or overly controlling, such as pressuring children to eat or using food as a reward. Parental role modeling is a simple way to guide food choices and help children build healthy eating routines. Parents might also consider engaging their children in meal planning and preparation.
When in doubt, Hennessy said, refer to the Agriculture Department's MyPlate program for dietary recommendations for children at different developmental stages.
'Emphasis should be on the major food groups and include a variety of foods within each group,' Hennessy said. Your meals should include 'a rainbow of fruits and vegetables; at least half of your grains are whole grains; lean proteins (meat, fish, poultry, eggs, beans and nuts) and low-fat dairy or dairy alternatives.'
In addition, the Dietary Guidelines for Americans encourage limiting intake of sodium, added sugars and saturated fats.
'No matter what your weight status, a healthy diet is important for better health,' Hennessy said.
Even for preteens who've long consumed unhealthy foods, puberty presents an opportunity for positive change, said Dr. Rachel Whooten, a pediatric endocrinologist at Massachusetts General Hospital for Children, who wasn't involved in the study.
It's 'a key time to optimize all of the health behaviors — optimize nutrition, optimize physical activity, optimize sleep, decrease screen time,' Whooten said. 'A lot of those behaviors do worsen throughout middle and later adolescence. … It's never too late to promote the healthier habits.'
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NBC News
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U.S. overdose deaths fell 27% last year but remain above prepandemic levels
There were 30,000 fewer U.S. drug overdose deaths in 2024 than the year before — the largest one-year decline ever recorded. An estimated 80,000 people died from overdoses last year, according to provisional Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data released Wednesday. That's down 27% from the 110,000 in 2023. The CDC has been collecting comparable data for 45 years. The previous largest one-year drop was 4% in 2018, according to the agency's National Center for Health Statistics. All but two states saw declines last year — with some of the biggest in Ohio, West Virginia and other states that have been hard-hit in the nation's decades-long overdose epidemic. Experts say more research needs to be done to understand what drove the reduction, but they mention several possible factors. Among the most cited: Increased availability of the overdose-reversing drug naloxone. Expanded addiction treatment. Shifts in how people use drugs. The growing impact of billions of dollars in opioid lawsuit settlement money. The number of at-risk Americans is shrinking, after waves of deaths in older adults and a shift in teens and younger adults away from the drugs that cause most deaths. Still, annual overdose deaths are higher than they were before the COVID-19 pandemic. And some experts worry that the recent decline could be slowed or stopped by reductions in federal funding and the public health workforce, or a shift away from the strategies that seem to be working. 'Now is not the time to take the foot off the gas pedal,' said Dr. Daniel Ciccarone, a drug policy expert at the University of California, San Francisco. The provisional numbers are estimates of everyone who died of overdoses in the U.S., including noncitizens. That data is still being processed, and the final numbers can sometimes differ a bit. But it's clear that there was a huge drop last year. Experts note that there have been past moments when U.S. overdose deaths seemed to have plateaued or even started to go down, only to rise again. That happened in 2018. But there are reasons to be optimistic. Naloxone has become more widely available, in part because of the introduction of over-the-counter versions that don't require prescriptions. Meanwhile, drug manufacturers, distributors, pharmacy chains and other businesses have settled lawsuits with state and local governments over the painkillers that were a main driver of overdose deaths in the past. The deals over the last decade or so have promised about $50 billion over time, with most of it required to be used to fight addiction. Another settlement that would be among the largest, with members of the Sackler family who own OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma agreeing to pay up to $7 billion, could be approved this year. The money, along with federal taxpayer funding, is going to a variety of programs, including supportive housing and harm reduction efforts, such as providing materials to test drugs for fentanyl, the biggest driver of overdoses now. But what each state will do with that money is currently at issue. 'States can either say, 'We won, we can walk away'' in the wake of the declines or they can use the lawsuit money on naloxone and other efforts, said Regina LaBelle, a former acting director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy. She now heads an addiction and public policy program at Georgetown University. President Donald Trump's administration views opioids as largely a law enforcement issue and as a reason to step up border security. That worries many public health leaders and advocates. 'We believe that taking a public health approach that seeks to support — not punish — people who use drugs is crucial to ending the overdose crisis,' said Dr. Tamara Olt, an Illinois woman whose 16-year-old son died of a heroin overdose in 2012. She is now executive director of Broken No Moore, an advocacy organization focused on substance use disorder. Olt attributes recent declines to the growing availability of naloxone, work to make treatment available, and wider awareness of the problem. Kimberly Douglas, an Illinois whose 17-year-old son died of an overdose in 2023, credited the growing chorus of grieving mothers. 'Eventually people are going to start listening. Unfortunately, it's taken 10-plus years.'


NBC News
07-05-2025
- NBC News
Girls who eat a healthy diet may be less likely to start puberty early, study suggests
Girls who grow up eating a healthier diet than their peers may be less likely to get their first menstrual periods at an earlier age — regardless of height or body mass index — a new study suggests. Though previous research has tied height and BMI to the earlier onset of menarche, or first period, the study, published Tuesday in the journal Human Reproduction, claims to be the first to explore the biological milestone's link to specific diets. Girls typically begin puberty — marked by acne, growth spurts, breast development and the growth of body and pubic hair — anywhere from ages 8 to 13, according to the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. They get their first periods roughly two years after their breasts start developing. While precocious puberty, which is the onset of puberty in girls younger than 8 and boys younger than 9, affects just 1% of U.S. children, girls nationwide are getting their first periods earlier and earlier. The median age at menarche was 11.9 in 2013 through 2017, down from 12.1 in 1995, according to the National Center for Health Statistics. Early menarche is more than untimely sexual maturity. Girls who get their periods younger than average are at increased risk of myriad medical problems throughout adolescence, such as depression, substance abuse and eating disorders. As adults, they have heightened odds of developing breast cancer, heart disease, obesity and other conditions. To study the possible effects of diet on the age of a girl's first period, researchers at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle looked at the health records of more than 7,500 children ages 9 to 14 who had been enrolled in two waves of the Growing Up Today Study, from 1996 through 2001 and 2004 through 2008. As part of that study, the kids completed questionnaires about the foods they ate. The researchers used two scales to gauge the girls' self-reported eating habits. One looked at how healthy a child's diet was, giving more points for healthier foods, such as legumes, whole grains and vegetables, and deducting points for less healthy foods, including red meat and products high in salt and trans fats. The second scale looked at how much people's diets contributed to inflammation, with foods such as refined grains, high-calorie drinks and red and processed meat considered more inflammatory. The median age of participants' first periods was 13.1, the study found. Girls who ate healthiest, the study estimated, were more likely to get their periods at a slightly older age than those who reported eating the least healthy diets. Similarly, girls who ate the highest amounts of inflammatory foods were more likely than those who ate the lowest amounts to get their first periods at a slightly younger age. The study is observational, meaning it doesn't prove that a particular diet causes early periods but instead establishes a possible link. A major limitation of the study is that the majority of participants were white. Race and ethnicity are well-studied aspects of early menarche, with Black and Hispanic girls more likely to experience it. What should girls eat to avoid early periods? One hypothesis linking diet and age of first period, the authors wrote, is that the foods a person eats can affect levels of sex hormones in the body. A previous study of premenopausal women found that eating a healthier diet is linked to lower levels of certain sex hormones, including versions of estrogen. Inflammation has also been shown to have an effect on sex hormone levels. Previous research has shown that excess fat, or adipose tissue, influences the hormone pathways that regulate puberty, said Erin Hennessy, director of the ChildObesity180 program at Tufts University, who wasn't part of the study. 'Adipose tissue produces certain hormones, including leptin, which send signals to the brain, and the thought is that higher levels of leptin among children with excess weight can trigger specific hormones that initiate puberty earlier,' Hennessy said in an email. 'Adipose tissue can also alter sex hormones, leading to higher estrogen levels that promote breast development and menarche onset.' Diet alone doesn't determine the timing of a girl's first period. Genetics, environmental toxins, physical activity and socioeconomic status, among other factors, also play roles. Still, parents can support their children's overall health and well-being through nutrition, Hennessy said. 'The first strategy is to acknowledge that weight is one of many factors of health and should never be the sole focus,' Hennessy said. 'The second strategy is to take a family approach — everyone in the family can benefit from healthy eating.' Third, Hennessy encourages parents to provide nutritional structure that isn't coercive or overly controlling, such as pressuring children to eat or using food as a reward. Parental role modeling is a simple way to guide food choices and help children build healthy eating routines. Parents might also consider engaging their children in meal planning and preparation. When in doubt, Hennessy said, refer to the Agriculture Department's MyPlate program for dietary recommendations for children at different developmental stages. 'Emphasis should be on the major food groups and include a variety of foods within each group,' Hennessy said. Your meals should include 'a rainbow of fruits and vegetables; at least half of your grains are whole grains; lean proteins (meat, fish, poultry, eggs, beans and nuts) and low-fat dairy or dairy alternatives.' In addition, the Dietary Guidelines for Americans encourage limiting intake of sodium, added sugars and saturated fats. 'No matter what your weight status, a healthy diet is important for better health,' Hennessy said. Even for preteens who've long consumed unhealthy foods, puberty presents an opportunity for positive change, said Dr. Rachel Whooten, a pediatric endocrinologist at Massachusetts General Hospital for Children, who wasn't involved in the study. It's 'a key time to optimize all of the health behaviors — optimize nutrition, optimize physical activity, optimize sleep, decrease screen time,' Whooten said. 'A lot of those behaviors do worsen throughout middle and later adolescence. … It's never too late to promote the healthier habits.'


The Guardian
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- The Guardian
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