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Physical Development in Adolescence

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Title: Physical Development in Adolescence


1
Physical Development in Adolescence
  • Lecture 15
  • C6035 Human Development

2
Biological and Sociohistorical Nature of
Adolescence
  • G. Stanley Hall -father of the scientific study
    of adolescence-ideas first published in 1904 in a
    two-volume set titled Adolescence
  • All development is controlled by genetically
    determined physiological factors
  • Environment plays minimal role in development,
    especially during infancy childhood
  • Storm and stress view is Halls concept that
    adolescence is turbulent time-charged with
    conflict mood swings

3
Inventionist View
  • Adolescence is a sociohistorical creation
  • At turn of 20th century, legislation ensured
    dependency of youth helped make their move into
    economic sphere more manageable
  • Schools, work economics are important
    dimensions of inventionist view of adolescence

4
Todays Youth
  • By some criteria, todays adolescents are doing
    better than their counterparts from decade or two
    earlier
  • More adolescents complete high school
  • Majority have positive self-concept positive
    relationships with others
  • Majority of adolescents experience transition to
    adulthood more positively, many today are not
    provided with adequate opportunities support to
    become competent adults
  • High divorce rates, high adolescent pregnancy
    rates, increased geographic mobility of families
    contribute to this lack of stability in their
    lives

5
Pubertys Boundaries Determinants
  • Puberty period of rapid physical maturation
    involving hormonal bodily changes that occur
    primarily during early adolescence
  • Menarche girls first menstruation, occurs at
    approximately age 12 to 13, but has been
    declining an average of about 4 months per decade
    for past century
  • Key factor in pubertys occurrence is body
    mass-body weight approximating 106 (plus or minus
    3 pounds) can trigger menarche
  • Pubertys determinants include nutrition, health,
    heredity body mass-except for menarche, which
    occurs rather late in puberty, no single marker
    heralds its coming

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8
Hormonal Changes
  • Hormones powerful chemical substances secreted
    by endocrine glands carried through body by
    bloodstream
  • Hypothalamus structure in higher portion of
    brain that monitors eating, drinking sex
  • Pituitary gland important endocrine gland
    controls growth regulates other glands
  • Gonads sex glands - testes in males ovaries in
    female

9
Hormones
  • Two primary classes of hormones
  • Androgens male sex hormones
  • Estrogens female sex hormones
  • Testosterone androgen plays important role in
    male pubertal development
  • Estradiol estrogen plays important role in
    female pubertal development

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11
Height, Weight Sexual Maturation
  • Peak rate of pubertal change occurs at 11.5 years
    for girls and 13.5 years for boys
  • During their growth spurt, girls increase in
    height about 3-1/2 inches per year, boys about 4
    inches
  • Boys girls who are shorter or taller than their
    peers before adolescence are likely to remain so
    during adolescence
  • Marked weight gains coincide with onset of
    puberty - Girls tend to outweigh boys, but by
    about age 14, boys begin to surpass girls

12
Sexual Maturation
  • Three most noticeable areas of sexual maturation
    in boys are penis elongation, testes development
    growth of facial hair
  • Pubertal changes in females unfold in less
    clear-cut way than they do in males - breasts
    enlarge or pubic hair appears - later hair
    appears in armpits
  • As these changes occur female grows in height-her
    hips become wider than her shoulders

13
Menarche and the Menstrual Cycle
  • Pubertal changes such events as menarche,
    produce different body that requires considerable
    change in self-perception, possibly resulting in
    identity crisis
  • In one study of 639 girls, most of the girls
    described their first period as a little
    upsetting, a little surprising, or a little
    exciting and positive that menarche was an
    index of their maturity - most frequent negative
    aspects reported were hassle messiness

14
Body Image
  • Preoccupation with ones body image is strong
    throughout adolescence, but it is especially
    acute during puberty
  • In general, girls are less happy with their
    bodies have more negative body images
  • As pubertal change proceeds, girls often become
    more dissatisfied with their bodies, while boys
    become more satisfied

15
Early and Late Maturation
  • In a Berkeley Longitudinal Study, early-maturing
    boys perceived themselves more positively had
    more successful peer relationships than did their
    late-maturing counterparts
  • More recent research confirms that at least
    during adolescence, it is advantageous to be an
    early-maturing rather than late-maturing boy
  • In the sixth grade, early-maturing girls show
    greater satisfaction with their figures than do
    late-maturing girls, but by tenth grade
    late-maturing girls are more satisfied

16
Pubertal Timing and Health Care
  • Many adolescents whose development is extremely
    early or late are likely to come to the attention
    of a physician
  • These adolescents may have fears concerns about
    normal growth which may never be addressed by
    professionals
  • Early-maturing girls, especially, benefit from
    discussions with health-care providers or
    counselors concerning peer pressures, dating
    practices how to engage in adult like behavior
    at an early age

17
Leading Causes of Death in Adolescence
  • 3 leading causes of death in adolescence
    accidents, suicide, homicide
  • More than ½ of all deaths ages 10 to 19 due to
    accidents most involve motor vehicles
  • In about 50 of motor vehicle fatalities
    involving an adolescent driver has blood alcohol
    level of 0.10
  • Suicide accounts for 6 of deaths in 10-14 age
    group 12 in 15-19 age group.
  • Homicide is high among African-American males
    adolescent who are 3 times more likely to be
    killed by guns than by natural causes

18
Heterosexual Attitudes Behavior
  • In national survey of adolescents, sexual
    intercourse was uncommon in early adolescence but
    more common in high school college years
  • 8 in 10 girls 7 in 10 boys are virgins at age
    15
  • Probability that adolescents will have sexual
    intercourse increases steadily with age
  • Initial sexual intercourse occurs in mid to late
    adolescent years for most teenagers
  • Most adolescent females first voluntary sexual
    partners are either younger, same age, or no more
    than two years older

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21
Homosexual Attitudes Behavior
  • 4 males 3 females are exclusively homosexual
  • More than 6 of 18-year-olds say they had
    predominantly homosexual attractions
  • Among biological factors believed to be involved
    in homosexuality are prenatal hormone conditions
  • Adolescence may play an important role in the
    development of homosexuality

22
Contraceptive Use
  • Although adolescent contraceptive use is
    increasing, many sexually active teens do not use
    contraceptives
  • Sexually active younger adolescents are less
    likely to take contraceptive precautions than
    older adolescents
  • In one study, more adolescent females than males
    reported changing their behavior in direction of
    safer sex practices

23
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
  • Teenagers tend to believe that
  • Sexually transmitted diseases (STD) always happen
    to someone else
  • STDs can be easily cured without any harm done
  • STDs are too disgusting for a nice young person
    to even hear about, let alone get
  • STDs are fairly common among todays adolescents

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25
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
  • Chlamydia named for bacteria that causes it,
    affects as many as 10 of all college males
    females
  • Herpes Simplex Virus II symptoms include
    irregular cycles of sores blisters in genital
    area-although disease is more common among young
    adults - as many as 1 in 35 adolescents have
    genital herpes
  • Syphilis tiny bacterium that requires warm,
    moist surfaces to penetrate body -Penicillin is
    successful treatment for syphilis

26
AIDS (acquired immune deficiency syndrome)
  • Caused by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-
    which destroys bodys immune system
  • Many germs that usually would not harm a person
    with healthy immune system can produce
    devastation death in persons with AIDS
  • Number of AIDS cases reported in 13-19 age group
    has increased each year since 1981 to almost
    2,184 cases in 1995
  • Since average latency time from viral infection
    to time of illness is about five to seven years,
    most infected adolescents would not become ill
    until they are adults

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28
Adolescent Pregnancy
  • Each year, more than 500,000 American teenagers
    become pregnant, more than 70 percent of them
    unmarried
  • More than 200,000 females in U.S. have a child
    before their 18th birthday
  • The rate is lower now that it was in the 1950s
    and 1960s

29
Steady rise in number of nonmarried teenage
pregnancies
  • 2 to 3 decades ago if an unwed adolescent girl
    became pregnant - her parents often had her
    swiftly married in shotgun wedding
  • Today, however, there is less stigma attached to
    a illegitimacy
  • Adolescent pregnancy rate in U.S. is much higher
    than in other industrialized countries
  • It is more than twice as high as rates in
    England, France Canada

30
Substance Use and Abuse
  • Proportion of 8th graders taking illicit drugs in
    past 12 months nearly doubling since 1991
  • Among 10th graders - annual marijuana use nearly
    doubled from 15 in 1992 to 34 in 1996
  • Among 12th graders it has risen to 36- 14
    increase since 1992
  • In 65 of aggressive male acts against
    females-offender is under influence of alcohol
  • Each year, approximately 25,000 people are killed
    1.5 million injured by drunk drivers
  • Data from college students show increase in heavy
    drinking underscored by high profile cases of 18
    and 19 year-olds dying from alcohol poisoning as
    a result of binge drinking

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32
Adolescent smoking
  • Peaked in mid 70s, then declined through 1980
  • In 90s adolescent cigarette smoking increased
    with 19 of 8th graders and 28 of 10th graders
    reported daily use of tobacco
  • Some peer group programs such as Keep It Clean
    Health Olympics have had some success in
    preventing curbing teen tobacco use

33
Eating Disorders
  • America is a nation obsessed with food, spending
    extraordinary amount of time thinking about,
    eating avoiding food
  • Eating disorders are complex, involving genetic
    inheritance, physiological factors, cognitive
    factors environmental experiences
  • Anorexia nervosa involves relentless pursuit of
    thinness through starvation, eventually causing
    death
  • Bulimia individual consistently follows
    binge-and-purge eating pattern.

34
Cognitive and Sociocultural Factors in Adolescent
Health
  • While adolescents usually recognize that
    substance abuse unprotected sexual intercourse
    are potential health hazards, they often
    underestimate negative consequences
  • Because there are large within-group differences
    in living conditions lifestyles of ethnic
    minority groups, sociocultural factors are not
    always recognized
  • Poverty is related to poor health in adolescents
    which is contributed by insufficient family
    income, few role models, strong influence of
    peers lack of appropriate medical care

35
Health Services
  • Among the chief barriers to better health
    services for adolescents are cost, poor
    organization unavailability of health services
  • Few health care workers receive any special
    training for working with adolescents
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