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  • girls using AAS

    Girls are abusing steroids, too
    Experts say some female users seek toned look
    Monday, April 25, 2005 Posted: 10:00 PM EDT (0200 GMT)

    TRENTON, New Jersey (AP) -- An alarming number of American girls, some as young as 9, are using bodybuilding steroids -- not necessarily to get an edge on the playing field, but to get the toned, sculpted look of models and movie stars, experts say.

    Girls are getting their hands on the same dangerous testosterone pills, shots and creams that have created a scandal in Major League Baseball and other sports. Often, these are the same girls who have eating disorders, according to some research.

    "There's been a substantial increase for girls during the 1990s, and it's at an all-time high right now," said Charles Yesalis, a professor of health and human development at Pennsylvania State University.

    Lloyd Johnston, a University of Michigan professor who heads an annual government-sponsored survey on risky behavior by young people, said: "Other than pedophilia, this is the most secret behavior I've ever encountered."

    Overall, up to about 5 percent of high school girls and 7 percent of middle-school girls admit trying anabolic steroids at least once, with use of rising steadily since 1991, various government and university studies have shown.

    Researchers say that most girls are using steroids to get bigger and stronger on the playing field, and they attribute some of the increase in steroid use to girls' rising participation in sports. But plenty of other girls are using steroids to give themselves a slightly muscular look, they say.

    "With young women, you see them using it more as a weight control and body fat reduction" method, said Jeff Hoerger, who runs the staff counseling program at Rutgers University in New Jersey.

    In the past couple of years, he has helped two young women using steroids -- one an 11th-grader with "an average figure" whose swimmer friend suggested steroids would help with weight loss. "She was just looking for quick results," Hoerger said.

    The sports medicine division at the Oregon Health and Science University found that two-thirds of Oregon high school girls who admitted using steroids were not athletes and that girls who were considering taking steroids had tried other, risky ways to get thin.

    "They were more likely to have eating disorders and to abuse diuretics, amphetamines and laxatives," said Dr. Linn Goldberg, head of the division.

    In teenage girls, the side effects from taking male sex hormones can include severe acne, smaller breasts, deeper voice, irregular periods, excess facial and body hair, depression, paranoia and the fits of anger dubbed "roid rage." Steroids also carry higher risks of heart attack, stroke and some forms of cancer.

    Researchers say youngsters generally get illegal anabolic steroids on the black market from relatives or friends, from the local gym and over the Internet. At least one study indicates some parents and coaches supply steroids to teen athletes.

    Dr. Eric Small, chairman of the American Academy of Pediatrics' committee on sports medicine, said adults should gently ask youngsters about possible steroid use.

    "Talking about supplements and steroids needs to start in the third grade," Small said. "If you wait till ninth grade, it's too late."

  • #2
    Give me a freakin break! If the government is so worried about kids, how about taking the processed garbage they call food out of the school cafeterias? How about insisting the dairy everyone is brainwashed into thinking is healthful- is at least hormone and anitbiotic free ?
    This BS sensationalism about steroids is just a media ploy to get everyone to turn a blind eye to the horrors of the war. Wake the fuck up.

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    • #3
      I always wonder about these sort of stories and the figures they always provide. I saw the results of a drug use survey for my area which claimed that around 20, male and female, students in the secondary school system admitted to useing steroids out of more then 2000 students. A co-worker had a look at the figures for other drugs and commented that she has doubts over the validity of these surveys. She stated that she does not know 1 single drug user, and she admits to being one, who would admit to useing on paper. Plus the fact that a lot of teenagers will mess around means that they would probably right down anything. Heck, I sometimes give false responces to surveys. However I do belive that some of the findings may well be correct, while I doubt a 9 year old girl would knowingly take steroids I do personally know one who did when she was 15. But I do agree that taking aim at steroids seems to be more media driven then anything else.

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      • #4
        There is an article in the current issue of MD where John Romano brings some heat the doctor behind the "9 year old" story, and the doc somehow tries to discredit the notion, or at least distance himself from 9 year olds taking steroids. Either way, it seems like an odd, media-created statement with little basis in fact.

        I coach 9 year old girls...who would give gear to a 9 year old? whick 9 year old would ask for it?

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        • #5
          I suppose another question is, how many 9 year old girls do you know that even lift weights?

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          • #6
            There was a long editorial in MD a couple months back where John Romano came down on the doctor who came up with the "9 year olds" comment...it was interesting, basically, the doc tried to retract his statement...

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