ATTENTION MEDIA & OTHERS SEEKING INTERVIEWS!
If you represent a media company, are a student writing a report or anyone interested in interviewing our visitors, please seek permission (see email address at the bottom of the page) before posting your requests or emailing solicitations for any talk show, magazine, thesis, census or other interview on any message board on this site. If not, your posts WILL be removed. Please respect the privacy of our members.
Yep .... I agree with "Anon": we've had 3 different endos (due to moving all over the country!), and they have all STRIVED to have our daughter's bone age around a year behind her chronological age. The reasoning is that if you keep the kids smaller when they're younger, then they can have optimal growth - with meds adjustment, of course - when they reach puberty. Having a bone age that is older than actual age is a problem though. Talk to your endo about it: I'm sure he/she would be happy to explain things.