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Published 15:07 13 Nov 2016 GMT
"It has been noted over the last twenty - thirty years that the age of onset of puberty has been getting earlier. This is thought to be related to better nutrition and also that children are now heavier than they were at the same age a generation ago. There have been some studies showing that children from poorer countries have a later onset of puberty but if the family moves and sets up home in a more affluent western country that the children adopt the average puberty age of their new home – so it is not due to the genetics of the parents."She also explained that it was once seen as unusual for girls to get their period as young as 8 and that they would have been advised to refer to a paediatrician.
"The recommendation now is that girls starting periods at age 8 is within the normal range so paediatric referral is not needed."Perhaps in the next few decades girls hitting puberty under the age of 10 will become the norm.
"Interestingly, at the other end of the menstrual history the age of the menopause has not changed in the last fifty years." Dr McQuade concluded.
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