Normal view
- Variety
- Apple Discounts AirPods to Nearly 40% Off — One of the Cheapest Price We’ve Ever Seen for Cyber Monday
Apple Discounts AirPods to Nearly 40% Off — One of the Cheapest Price We’ve Ever Seen for Cyber Monday
- Variety
- These New Cyber Monday Tablet Deals Save You Up to $600 on Microsoft, Samsung, Apple and More
These New Cyber Monday Tablet Deals Save You Up to $600 on Microsoft, Samsung, Apple and More
- Variety
- These Noise-Cancelling Headphones Are All on Sale for Black Friday: Bose, Sony, Apple and More
These Noise-Cancelling Headphones Are All on Sale for Black Friday: Bose, Sony, Apple and More
Best Cyber Monday Tech Deals to Shop: Apple AirPods, Smart TVs, Portable PC Gaming and More
- Variety
- Apple’s AirPods Max Headphones Down to Lowest Price Ever With $150 Discount for Black Friday
Apple’s AirPods Max Headphones Down to Lowest Price Ever With $150 Discount for Black Friday
- Variety
- Joan Vassos and Chock Chapple Tell All on Their ‘Golden Bachelorette’ Engagement, Wedding Plans and Who the Next ‘Golden Bachelor’ Should Be
Joan Vassos and Chock Chapple Tell All on Their ‘Golden Bachelorette’ Engagement, Wedding Plans and Who the Next ‘Golden Bachelor’ Should Be
Apple AirTags and Tile Mate Trackers Are Down to Their Lowest Prices of the Year
- Science – Ars Technica
- Modern lives are messing up menstrual cycles—earlier starts, more irregularity
Modern lives are messing up menstrual cycles—earlier starts, more irregularity
People in the US are starting their menstrual cycles earlier and experiencing more irregularities, both of which raise the risk of a host of health problems later in life, according to an Apple women’s health study looking at data from over 70,000 menstruating iPhone users born between 1950 and 2005.
The mean age of people's first period fell from 12.5 years in participants born between 1950 and 1969 to 11.9 years in participants born between 2000 and 2005, with a steady decline in between, the study found. There were also notable changes in the extremes—between 1950 and 2005, the percentage of people who started their periods before age 11 rose from 8.6 percent to 15.5 percent. And the percentage of people who started their periods late (at age 16 or above) dropped from 5.5 percent to 1.7 percent.
In addition to periods shifting to earlier starting ages, menstrual cycles also appeared to become more irregular. For this, researchers looked at how quickly people settled into a regular cycle after the start of their period. Between 1950 and 2005, the percentage of people obtaining regularity within two years fell from 76.3 percent to 56 percent.