Sexual Health
Do girls often watch TV and suffer from precocious puberty? These taboos for precocious puberty should be known by parents as soon as possible
Where does modern people's ignorance of sex come from? This has to mention television. Watching TV is already an essential entertainment program in daily life for people nowadays, but do you know what phenomena can be easily triggered when children watch TV programs for a long time?
A research report by British scientists suggests that the impact of regularly watching TV on children's health far exceeds people's expectations, and some girls' precocious puberty may also be related to regularly watching TV.
The research results, conducted by British psychologist Arich Siegman, are published in the scientific journal Biologist. He found through research that regularly watching TV in children can reduce the secretion of the hormone melatonin, thereby affecting their immune system, sleep patterns, and developmental time.
Research has shown that if a girl's melatonin level is too low, she will develop early and enter puberty. In addition, healthy cells in children are also more prone to carcinogenic mutations.
In addition, regularly watching TV can cause children's vision to decrease, weight gain, irregular sleep patterns, and easily lead to children's personality isolation and autism, which is very detrimental to their physical and mental health.
Case: 3-year-old girl enters "adolescence"
According to reports, 45 year old program manager David Smith and 41 year old wife Debbie are from Nottingham, UK. They have a 12 year old daughter named Hailie.
When Haili was only 3 years old, she frequently experienced "menstrual pain" and had significant emotional changes. My mother Debbie said, "I know something's wrong. A few months later, I noticed that she had more symptoms of precocious puberty, such as her breasts starting to bulge. David and I both felt very shocked and anxious, and we don't know what happened to her
Parents seem to have experienced a nightmare
As Haley was nearing her fourth birthday, Debbie noticed that her daughter had begun to experience obvious premenstrual symptoms. Debbie was stunned by her discovery and said, "It's unimaginable for a 3-year-old girl to enter puberty, but everything that happens to her clearly tells me that
Haili underwent countless tests and was finally diagnosed with precocious puberty at the age of 6. Although Haili didn't really start menstruating until she was 8 years old, the fact that she entered puberty from the age of 3 made her parents feel like they had experienced a nightmare.