Normal, or Better Than Normal - at a High Cost
By Marcy Darnovsky,
Psychology Today blogs
| 06. 03. 2009
The vast majority of children who feel they are too tall or too short - or whose parents feel that way - have no medical problem. To be sure, some kids above or below "normal" height endure schoolmates who bully, mock, or exclude them; parents who pressure or infantilize them; and employers who underpay or overlook them. Their suffering can be considerable, but their condition is entirely psychological and social.
Normal at Any Cost: Tall Girls, Short Boys and the Medical Industry's Quest to Manipulate Height is a gripping account of efforts over the past 50 years to "fix" children's height with hormones and other drugs. Authors Susan Cohen and Christine Cosgrove give us solid reporting, rich detail and human stories about this ongoing experiment.
Some of the medical interventions into height have gone bad. From the 1950s to the 1980s - before Title IX invited girls to play basketball and volleyball, before fashions and fashion models changed, before Michelle Obama became First Lady - thousands of girls "at risk" of winding up tall were dosed with huge amounts of...
Related Articles
By Ruha Benjamin, Los Angeles Review of Books | 10.18.2024
IN THE FALL OF 2016, I gave a talk at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton titled “Are Robots Racist?” Headlines such as “Can Computers Be Racist? The Human-Like Bias of Algorithms,” “Artificial Intelligence’s White Guy Problem,” and “Is...
Reproductive rights have been a flashpoint in national politics for decades, with the stakes surging after the Supreme Court shredded the right to an abortion. In the current presidential campaign, the battle over abortion has swelled and morphed to encompass in vitro fertilization (IVF), which has now moved rapidly from widely accepted to partisan hot button.
This dramatic shift was highlighted by the February decision of the Alabama Supreme Court that granted personhood rights to frozen IVF embryos, signaling that...
By Émile P. Torres, Truthdig | 08.08.2024
By Parmy Olson, Bloomberg Opinion | 07.12.2024
Photo from Hubert Burda Media via Flickr licensed under CC by NC-SA 2.0
Peter Thiel’s Enhanced Games promise to be an annual sporting event that lets athletes use performance-enhancing drugs, nicknamed the pro-doping Olympics (which some would scoff isn’t all...