Ma'af slighty off-topic. Balita kita akan jadi teen dalam waktu
6 ~ 11 tahun mendatang. Mungkin trend ini sudah masuk di
Indonesia.

Yahoo! News
More Girls Try Taking Steroids to Tone Up
10 minutes ago
By LINDA A. JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer

TRENTON, N.J. - 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."

___

On the Net:

National Institute on Drug Abuse 
steroid site: http://www.steroidabuse.org

The Hormone Foundation 
steroid site: http://www.hormone.org/learn/abuse.html

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