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Sexualized Girlhood Tied to Mental, Physical Risks, Report Says

By Elizabeth Lopatto

Feb. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Girls are sexualized ``in virtually every form of media,'' leading to emotional and self-image problems that include eating disorders and depression, according to the American Psychological Association.

Dolls and thongs sold at outlets for children, as well as highly sexualized portrayals in magazines, on TV and in advertising, are ``creating an environment in which being female becomes nearly synonymous with being a sexual object,'' said a report made public today by a task force of psychologists.

If a girl identifies herself as being primarily a sexual object, both her academic performance and her mental health suffers, the group said. The report linked that identification with increases in the use of plastic surgery, smoking in teenaged girls and failure to use condoms during sex.

``What's disturbing is the extent to which we have allowed the culture to sell to our daughters such a narrow view of what they're worth and what they're valuable for,'' said Tomi-Ann Roberts, a professor at Colorado College in Colorado Springs and a co-author of the report, in a telephone interview today.

The increased cigarette use among surveyed teenaged girls may occur because girls feel cigarettes will help them control their weight, the report said.

Women deemed ``sexy'' are also more likely to be discriminated against when applying for skilled jobs, though not if they were applying to be receptionists, the report said.

``I'm hoping that not just parents of girls and people who care about girls will take an interest but parents of boys as well,'' said lead author Eileen Zurbriggen, an associate professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz, in a telephone interview today. ``We would like parents of boys to also critically examine this phenomenon and think about how it's affecting their sons.''

Male Romantic Relationships

Men are more likely to experience satisfaction with their romantic relationships when they do not hold beliefs related to the objectification of women, according to the report.

The report even goes so far as to analyze athletic activities by teenaged girls, noting that concerns about appearance can limit how well they throw a ball. The extent to which girls were concerned about their bodies' appearance predicted poorer performance on throwing, leading the researchers to conclude that sexualization ``limits the form and effectiveness of girls' physical movements.''

Appearing alongside the report on the APA website is a fact sheet targeted at concerned parents. Parents are encouraged to talk to their daughters about the choices girls make in clothing, or to say when they think something on television is objectionable in the way it portrays women.

Other Activities

Girls should also be taught other ways to think about identity, said Zurbriggeni, including extracurricular activities such as ``sports, religious activities, to help girls engage in their identity,'' she said.

Parents' and educators' anecdotal observations of culture spurred the study, said Roberts. ``We wanted to see if those concerns were something real,'' she said.

``We found that the idealized image was increasingly sexy. We might have said idealized womanhood was domestic in the 1950s, but now it's sexiness,'' she said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Elizabeth Lopatto in New York at elopatto@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: February 19, 2007 18:00 EST

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