The Health Costs of Adultification and Body Policing of Black Girls

Black girls in America are often denied the basic freedom of childhood. Long before they reach adulthood, they are perceived as older, more sexual, and more responsible than they actually […] The post The Health Costs of Adultification and Body Policing of Black Girls appeared first on Black Health Matters.

The Health Costs of Adultification and Body Policing of Black Girls

Black girls in America are often denied the basic freedom of childhood. Long before they reach adulthood, they are perceived as older, more sexual, and more responsible than they actually are. This phenomenon, known as adultification, is not just a social bias. It is a public health issue with measurable consequences for Black girls’ mental, emotional, and physical well-being.

One study defines adultification as “the process by which children, particularly Black girls, are perceived and treated as more mature or adult-like than their peers, often resulting in the denial of their childhood experiences and the imposition of adult expectations”. When a child is treated like an adult, she is also expected to cope like one. That expectation alone creates a level of stress that young bodies and minds are not built to carry.

How Adultification Shows Up in the Body

The study found that Black girls expressed a “desire to maintain childhood” but felt pushed into maturity through hypersexualization, harsher discipline, and unrealistic expectations. Many caregivers echoed this concern by expressing their worry about “the rapid maturation of Black girls” and the criminalization they face in schools.

These pressures directly affect mental health. Chronic stress from being sexualized, judged, or punished more harshly can lead to:

Physical Symptoms

  • Headaches
  • Muscle tension or body pain
  • Stomach issues / nausea
  • Fatigue
  • Sleep problems
  • Chest pain
  • Changes in appetite (overeating or undereating)
  • Weakened immune system (getting sick more often)

Mood and Mental Health Symptoms

  • Anxiety
  • Sadness or depression
  • Feeling overwhelmed
  • Irritability or anger
  • Low motivation or trouble focusing
  • Memory problems
  • Low self-esteem or body dissatisfaction

Behavioral Symptoms

  • Withdrawal from friends or activities
  • Overworking or perfectionism
  • Emotional shutdown
  • Using food, substances, or screens to cope
  • Avoiding school or health appointments

It is noted that adultification leads to “unmet emotional and cognitive needs”, especially in schools and health care settings. When Black girls are treated as adults, they are denied the compassion, patience, and developmental support that other children receive. This erodes their self-esteem and increases their vulnerability into depression, anxiety, and trauma responses.

Other ways adultification affects the body include:

  • Their stress levels stay high.
  • Their bodies stay in survival mode.
  • Their risk for long-term health problems increases (high blood pressure, heart disease, obesity, diabetes).

Ways to Cope With Stress

Stress management is not a cure for adultification, but it can support Black girls’ wellbeing while society works to dismantle the systems harming them. Stress management can include these activities:

  • Getting regular physical activity
  • Practicing relaxation techniques (deep breathing, meditation, yoga, tai chi, massage)
  • Spending time with supportive friends and family
  • Keeping a sense of humor
  • Making time for hobbies (reading, music, walking, creative activities)
  • Writing in a journal
  • Getting enough sleep
  • Eating a balanced, nutritious diet
  • Avoiding tobacco, alcohol, and substance use
  • Choosing active coping (movement, creativity, connection) instead of passive coping (excessive TV, scrolling, gaming)

When to seek help:
If stress symptoms continue even after trying to manage them, a health care provider or therapist can help identify the source and offer tools for support. If there is chest pain with shortness of breath, dizziness, sweating, or nausea, emergency help is needed. These may be signs of a heart issue, not just stress.

 

Bottom Line

Adultification and body policing do not just shape how Black girls are seen. It shapes how they feel, how they grow, and how healthy they become. The research available proves that these experiences create chronic stress that affects the mind, body, and long term health outcomes. Black girls deserve care, compassion, and the freedom to be children both physically and mentally. Addressing adultification is not simply about fairness but it is about protecting their holistic health.  Protecting Black girls means protecting their health, and that starts with society giving them the childhood they are often denied.

Sources
Adultification of Young Black Females on Their Health and Well-being: A Qualitative Study
Racialized body dissatisfaction in Black women: development of the Black feminist model of body image – PMC
Stress symptoms: Effects on your body and behavior – Mayo Clinic
Objectification and adultification of black girls in the USA





The post The Health Costs of Adultification and Body Policing of Black Girls appeared first on Black Health Matters.