"…from
the health aspects to the emotional bonding that takes place between
a mother and a baby. Dr. Palmer does a great job of summarizing the
research associated with the first year of baby's life and writing
in a style that makes you feel like you're talking to a girlfriend
over tea and cookies." --Vegfamily.com
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Coming of Age in America
(Much Too Soon)
by Linda Folden Palmer, DC
Author
Baby Matters
Reprinted from Dynamic Chiropractic
May, 1999
Girls in the U.S. and other industrialized nations are now reaching
puberty at drastically earlier ages.1 However, Hispanic-American
girls don't experience this early puberty to the extent that many other
Americans do, reported Mary Wolf,MD, at the American Association for
Cancer Research's annual meeting in April, 1999 in Philadelphia.2
Two factors proven responsible for precocious puberty are detached
parenting3 and consumption of cow's milk. As a whole, Hispanic
parents tend to protect their young from both of these debilitating
influences. Children who reach puberty and menarche early have adult
sexual feelings they don't understand, which then leads to increased
teen pregnancy and venereal disease. There is also a greatly increased
risk of reproductive cancers, including breast cancer.4
When an infant is raised with natural feeding, plenty of body contact
and a high level of affectionate response, strong attachment bonds are
developed.5 According to attachment researchers, the consequences
of this parenting style are fewer behavior problems and mental disorders,
less social misconduct, a greater ability to form lasting adult relationships,
and improved overall health.6 In contrast, when nursing is
withheld from a baby and there is maternal separation during much of
the day and night, high levels of the stress hormone cortisol are produced.7
This leads to permanently altered brain function, hormonal imbalance
and reduced immune functioning, as well as increased mental and behavior
problems and a decreased ability to deal with stress throughout life.8,9,10,11
Cow's milk has a high fat content, high levels of biologically available
hormones and growth factors, and other chemical contaminants from highly
medicated cows fed environmental trash12 (chicken feces and
diseased carcasses, for instance). These are all linked to early puberty
and proliferation of cancer cells in human reproductive organs.13,14,15
Moreover, immune reactions to large bovine proteins are associated with
gastrointestinal disease16 and cancer.17,18 When
consumption of cow's milk starts in infancy (via baby formulas), the
consequences seem to be the most dire.19
Hispanic children are more often breastfed, and for extended periods.
This leads not only to good attachment, but prevents exposure to artificial
feeds derived from bovine milk. Hispanic youngsters often sleep with
their parents or other family members and grow up in warmer family-oriented
environments, resulting in deeper attachments between children and parents,
thereby preventing high cortisol levels and their effects on early puberty.20
Early maturity is an innate survival response to inadequate resources
in childhood21 seen in many mammals.
When resources are scarce - namely, when parents and nutrition are less
available, children become more aggressive (to be able to compete for
limited food resources), and they mature more quickly (providing for
survival of the species as opposed to quality of life). 20th-century
parenting often signals scarcity responses in an infant, including practices
such as leaving children alone to "cry it out," feeding on schedules
rather than in response to hunger cries, and providing less nutritious
feed (infant formula).
In general, the consumption of dairy products in traditional Hispanic
homes beyond infancy is also lower than U.S. averages. Although American
Mexican food is often piled high with cheese and sour cream, this is
not the case in traditional Hispanic homes.
Being genetically Hispanic is not enough. As a Hispanic family lives
in the U.S. for several generations, their level of physical and psychological
disease increases.22 Evidently, as standard American baby
care and diet are adopted, American levels of decreased health (and
presumable early puberty) are produced. Although it is more difficult
to measure, it is felt that early maturation is being experienced by
boys as well.
Dear Dr. Palmer, My 8y.o.
daughter is growing breast tissue...
References
- Herman-Giddens ME, et al. Secondary sexual characteristics and menses
in young girls seen in office practice: a study from the Pediatric
Research in Office Settings network. Pediatrics Apr 1997;99(4):505-12.
- Spinney L. Hispanic girls reach puberty later. BioMed News (www.biomednet.com
), April 12, 1999.
- Graber JA, et al. The antecedents of menarcheal age: heredity, family
environment, and stressful life events. Child Dev Apr 1996;66(2):346-59.
- Stoll BA, et al. Does early physical maturity influence breast cancer
risk? Acta Oncol (England) 1994;33(2):171-6.
- Main M. Introduction to the special section on attachment and psychopathology:
2. Overview of the field of attachment. J Consult Clin Psychol
Apr 1996;64(2):237-43.
- Harris ES, et al. Quality of mother-infant attachment and pediatric
health care use. Pediatrics Aug 1989;84(2):248-54.
- Spangler G, Grossmann KE. Biobehavioral organization in securely
and insecurely attached infants. Child Dev Oct 1993;64(5):1439-50.
- Gunnar MR. Quality of care and buffering of neuroendocrine stress
reactions: potential effects on the developing human brain. Prev
Med Mar/Apr 1998;27(2):208-11.
- Anisman H, et al. Do early life events permanently alter behavioral
and hormonal responses to stressors? Int J Dev Neurosci Jun/Jul
1998;16(3-4):149-64.
- Raber J. Detrimental effects of chronic hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal
axis activation. From obesity to memory deficits. Mol Neurobiol
Aug 1998;18(1):1-22.
- Lubach GR, et al. Effects of early rearing environment on immune
responses of infant rhesus monkeys. Brain Behav Immun Mar 1995;9(1):31-46.
- Gilka J, et al. Foreign substances in the meat and organs of bulls
and pigs fed with pastes made from household and food industry waste
in addition to pastes made from poultry droppings. Vet Med
(Praha-Czechoslovakia) Dec 1987;32(12):721-30.
- Stoll BA. Western diet, early puberty and breast cancer risk. Breast
Cancer Res Treat (England) Jun 1998;49(3):187-93.
- Outwater JL, et al. Dairy products and breast cancer: the IGF-I,
estrogen and bGH hypothesis. Med Hypotheses Jun 1997;48(6):453-61.
- Kato I, et al. Factors related to late menopause and early menarche
as risk factors for breast cancer. Jpn J Cancer Res (Japan)
Feb 1998;79(2):165-72.
- Knoflach P, et al. Serum antibodies to cow's milk proteins in ulcerative
colitis and Crohn's disease. Gastroenterology Feb 1987;92(2):479-85.
- Karlen P, et al. Increased risk of cancer in ulcerative colitis:
a population-based cohort study, Am J Gastroenterol (Sweden)
Apr 1999;94(4):1047-52.
- Nyberg F, et al. Dietary factors and risk of lung cancer in never-smokers.
Int J Cancer (Sweden) Nov 1998;78(4):430-6.
- Davis MK. Review of the evidence for an association between infant
feeding and childhood cancer. Int J Cancer suppl 1998(11):29-33.
- Dorn LD, et al. Biopsychological and cognitive differences in children
with premature vs. on time adrenarche. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med
Feb 1999;153(2):137-46.
- Belsky J, et al. Childhood experience, interpersonal development
and reproductive strategy: and evolutionary theory of socialization.
Child Dev Aug 1991;62(4):647-70.
- National Research Council and the Institute of Medicine. From
generation to generation: the health and well-being of children in
immigrant families. National Research Council and the Institute
of Medicine Report. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1998.
Linda Folden Palmer, DC
San Diego, California

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Baby Matters
Dr. Linda Palmer:
What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About Caring for Your Baby
Research has found that in animals,
a harsh childhood with limited resources produces early puberty and added
agression; supposedly in order to increase success in reproduction and
competition for food.
A high animal-fat diet, beyond
early childhood, is one factor associated with early puberty; such as
a diet heavy in milk, butter, cheese, cream cheese, sour cream, and ice-cream.
Cow's milk (like mother's
milk) is naturally full of estrogens, progesterone, testosterone, and
growth hormones for the calf. More growth hormone is then added artificially.
Hormone-like pesticides from
the cow's diet are concentrated in the milk fat.
No animal is intended to continue
consuming growth hormones beyond childhood.
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