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Sebastian Kraemer Child and Family Department,
Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust, London NW3 5BA
sebastian{at}kraemer-zurne.freeserve.co.uk.
The human male is, on most measures, more vulnerable than
the female. Part of the explanation is the biological fragility of the
male fetus, which is little understood and not widely known. A typical
attitude to boys is that they are, or must be made, more resilient than
girls. This adds "social insult to biological injury." Culture and
class make a difference to the health and survival of boys. The data
presented here have implications for the clinical management of male
patients as well as for the upbringing of boys.
At conception there are more male than female embryos. This may be
because the spermatozoa carrying the Y chromosome swim faster than
those carrying X. The male's pole position is, however, immediately
challenged. External maternal stress around the time of conception is
associated with a reduction in the male to female sex ratio, suggesting
that the male embryo is more vulnerable than the female.1
From this point on it is downhill all the way. The male fetus is at
greater risk of death or damage from almost all the obstetric
catastrophes that can happen before birth.2 Perinatal
brain damage,3 cerebral palsy,4 congenital
deformities of the genitalia and limbs, premature birth, and stillbirth
are commoner in boys,5 and by the time a boy is born he is
on average developmentally some weeks behind his sister: "A newborn
girl is the physiological equivalent of a 4 to 6 week old
boy."6 The male brain is heavier, with a larger
hypothalamus, probably from the influence of a surge of testosterone in
the third trimester of pregnancy, which also promotes greater muscle
bulk.7 Similar differences have been observed in
chimpanzees.8 At term the excess has fallen from around
120 male conceptions to 105 boys per 100 girls.9
By the time a boy is born the pattern seems set. Developmental
disorders Since the sex of most fetuses is unknown to the parents until
birth, social attitudes and prejudices about the sex of the baby cannot
make any difference, but as soon as the child is born these can amplify
pre-existing biological disadvantage or indeed, in traditional
patriarchal societies where males are strongly favoured, reduce it. In
rural Bangladesh, for example, more girls than boys die during infancy
and early childhood.19 Cultural expectations about
masculinity shape the experience of boys as they grow up. Most at risk
are the "boys who don't talk."20 They become
"ashamed of being ashamed,"21 and try to stop feeling anything. This makes them seem invulnerable, even to themselves. This
is not a safe strategy.
The excess of non-fatal and fatal accidents among boys seems to be part
of a pattern of poor motor and cognitive regulation in the developing
male, leading to misjudgment of risk. In adolescence the nature of risk
taking may change and lead to dangerous experiments with drugs and
alcohol or to violence against self and others. As is now well known,
the suicide rate in young men is several times higher than in young
women and has risen alarmingly from the late 1970s until recently in
Britain and several other Western nations.22 The dramatic
rise in this statistic Coeducation has exposed another difference that was less evident
(even though paradoxically more pronounced26) in the past: that girls are better than boys at most academic subjects. Results of
the GCSE (General Certificate of Secondary Education) examination, taken at age 16 in England, have only relatively recently been collected on a nationwide scale, but they show a considerable gap
between the sexes in scholastic achievement: 42.8% boys compared with
53.4% girls get grade C or above at GCSE,27 and in
lower social classes the gap is even greater.28 Boys
mature more slowly than girls and later tend to catch up with girls
academically. Disruptive ("boyish") behaviour may be less tolerated
in modern schools than it was in the past.29 Males,
meanwhile, tend to have superior skills in mathematics and other
non-verbal tasks. Even at the age of 2 boys do better than girls at
building a bridge with toy bricks.30 In general, males are
better at spatial and navigational skills, such as throwing, map
reading,31 chess, and architecture, though these are not
invariable advantages. Spatial ability, for example, is better in
female than male Inuit.32 Yet males everywhere have
consistently maintained a superior ability to match figures rotated at
different angles.33
Girls have better literary skills and are more aware of and explicit
about their feelings, while boys tend to clam up, especially when their
emotions are high, and just feel uncomfortable and awkward without
knowing why. The much studied defect "alexithymia" Even though almost all the most powerful positions in politics and
business are still occupied by relatively few men, recent social
changes in post-industrial societies do not favour the majority, but in
the rest of the world men retain social advantages Later in life the process continues unabated. Circulatory
disorders, diabetes, alcoholism, duodenal ulcer, and lung cancer are
all commoner in men,39 while women have significantly
higher rates of depressive, eating, and connective tissue disorders. Male suicide rates continue to exceed those in females throughout life,
and, as is universally known, women survive men by several
years in almost all countries, and the gap is widening. Androgens
could be implicated in the earlier death of males, but recent studies
suggest that female mosaicism may enhance lifespan.40
There is unlikely to be a single explanation for all the foregoing
differences, but it is worth exploring the period in life where there
may be interaction between inborn and environmental qualities.
If newborn boys are less mature than girls then they probably
require more attention. Trevarthen observed that parents tend to mimic
newborn boys more than they do girls, suggesting that as caregivers
they have to work harder with boys.41 Tronick and Weinberg
state that "infant boys are more emotionally reactive than girls.
They display more positive as well as negative affect, focus more on
the mother, and display more . . . distress and demands for contact
than do girls. Girls show more interest in objects, a greater constancy
of interest, and better self regulation of emotional
states."
42 43
At six months Malatesta and Haviland found a "very significant sex difference for the expression of interest, with female infants displaying interest expressions more
frequently than males . . . female infants have more open eyes and
higher brow placements than male infants [which] may serve to lead
observers to quite different overall impressions about male and female
sociability." Boys tended to be too excitable, and mothers did all
they could to soothe and settle them, at some cost to their
development.44 One of the findings of Murray and her
colleagues is that boys are more affected by maternal postnatal depression than girls, the effect extending into nursery school years,
long after the depression has lifted.
45 46
One of the most notable effects is inattentiveness and hyperactivity, especially in boys from families of lower social class. In Fivush's study of
communication styles of mothers with their 3 year old children, the
mothers did not judge any of their daughters to be angry, only their
sons.47 Significant differences in the perception of
emotional states are already established by this age. When exposed to
the distress of others, young boys are less sympathetic than girls. A
group of 6 year old girls and boys were listening to the recorded sound
of a crying baby. Many more girls than boys spoke kindly to what they
assumed was a real infant, while more than twice as many boys simply
turned the speaker off. Tracings of heart rate variability suggested
that the boys were more anxious; they could not tolerate the infant's
distress.48
Nor can they tolerate their own. In a recent study of the effects of
early bereavements and separations, although the numbers were
about equal in both sexes, boys dismissed the experiences as of little
concern more often than girls, while girls were more often unduly
preoccupied by them.49 Neither of these are healthy responses, but the boys' denial of loss or sorrow is consistent with
the male habit of not knowing how he feels and not asking for help when
it is needed. In one sample of British GPs male doctors showed more
anxiety and depression than female doctors (and more than the average
male population) and were more likely to avoid contact with other
people when stressed.50
The care of boys is generally more difficult and therefore more likely
to go wrong, adding to the deficits already existing before birth.
Since most of the growth of the human brain takes place after birth,
some early environmental stressors could lead to disadvantage for boys
being "wired in."51 In any case, in boys the formation
of secure attachment to a caregiver is more subject than in girls to
parental unavailability, insensitivity, or depression. Consistent with
this is the observation that male rhesus monkeys partially or totally
isolated from maternal care are more likely to "freeze" in test
situations than are matched females, who are more active and
curious.52
Before concluding that maleness is a genetic disorder it is
important to note that the foregoing data are embedded in social values
about normality. A hominid male of, say, half a million years ago may
have needed all the opportunities for risk taking he could get, just to
procreate. Charles Darwin noted this.53 Many male mammals
fail in their primary biological goal, which is to reproduce. They risk
instead being excluded, wounded, or killed by rivals. Rivalries in
human societies are more complex: perhaps competition for females has
been replaced by competition with them.54 The survival
skills required by our ancestors, such as how to calculate physical
risk, are not very similar to those needed today, even if we still have
most of the same genes. Male advantages in physical strength and
spatial skills were probably more useful in the past. In contrast,
while the pre-eminence of the few men who reach the very top of public
life is barely dented by women, the modern male is now more often seen
as lacking qualities associated with females, such as self regulation
of emotions and reflectiveness.
Summary points
The disadvantages of the male are usually seen as socially
mediated
Even from conception, before social effects come into play, males are
more vulnerable than females
Social attitudes about the resilience of boys compound the biological
deficit
Male mortality is greater than female mortality throughout life
The causes are a mixture of biological and social pressures: we need to
be aware of both in order to promote better development and health for
boys and men
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such as specific reading delay,10
hyperactivity,11 autism and related disorders, clumsiness,
stammering, and Tourette's syndrome12
occur three to
four times more often in boys than in girls, although girls, when they
have such a disorder, may be more severely affected.13
Conduct and oppositional disorders are at least twice as common in
boys.14 Genetic factors are known to play a part, varying
from low heritability in conduct disorder to high in
autism,15 but why are they all commoner in boys? None of
these conditions is sex linked in the classical sense. But Skuse et al
propose that the X chromosome does carry some of the burden of the
social and cognitive deficits that are common to many (but not all) of
these disorders.16 They found that, of people with
Turner's syndrome (XO), those with an X chromosome from their mothers
(who would be boys if they also had a Y chromosome) had significantly
more hyperactivity, attention deficits, and poorer social and emotional
expressivity than those with X chromosomes from their fathers. These
results are supported by the twin study of Scourfield et al, which
shows a significant genetic influence on social cognition to the
disadvantage of males.17 "Males are attempting something
extra all through life."18
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which parallels a soaring rate in violent
crime, also largely due to males23
implicates powerful
environmental rather than biological factors. For example, the male to
female ratio of suicides in the 15-24 age group varies from 7.1:1 in
Ireland to 1.1:1 in Mauritius.24 There is similar variation in deaths from all causes within countries. In England and
Wales the death rate in boys under 16 is 41% greater than in girls.
Differences between social classes are even greater: the death rate for
boys in social class V is more than twice that in social class
I.25

(Credit: ANGELA SMITH)
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lack of an
emotional vocabulary
is much commoner in boys.34
Alexithymia is associated with deficits in interhemispheric transfer
across the brain,35 a feature also noted in Hopkins and
Bard's study of infant chimpanzees.8
two thirds of the
960 million illiterate adults in the world are female.36 Disorders of addiction, particularly substance abuse, are commoner in
males. Even when ill, men may not notice signs of
illness,37 and when they do they are less likely to seek
help from doctors.38 This tendency will account for some
of the excess suicides in males. In his despair the victim believes
that no help is available, that talking is useless. If baby boys are
typically harder to care for (see below) it is arguable that they will
be more likely to feel lonely as adults.
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(Credit: BRIDGEMAN ART LIBRARY)
It is clear that the male is more vulnerable from the beginning of life. Where caregivers assume that from birth a boy ought always to be tougher than a girl, his inborn disadvantage will be amplified. (Where males are more highly valued, as the Bangladesh study shows,19 they get relatively better care, probably because girls are neglected.) The data presented here have implications for the upbringing of boys. The more developmental problems there are, the more sensitive care is required. Yet difficult babies often receive less good care, precisely because they are more difficult to look after. Biological and social constraints work together against the interests of the male. If parents were more aware of male sensitivity, they might change the way they treat their sons. Doctors, too, need to be aware that male patients may withhold their health concerns for fear of appearing needy or may ignore them altogether.
Most discussions (with a few honourable exceptions
55 56
)
tend to ignore one side or the other of the story. Plenty has been
written about sexual characteristics from a social and philosophical perspective, and about sexual differences from a Darwinian and biological point of view, but there is little evidence of common ground
between them and apparently little curiosity as to why boys are
vulnerable to so many stressors that may confront them. The implicit
assumption of the majority of scientific writers (most of whom until
this generation were themselves men) has probably been that "boys
will be boys." Perhaps they will, but the matter needs exploring in a
more coherent way.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
I am grateful to Professor David C Taylor for his help with an earlier draft of this paper.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Competing interests: None declared.
| |
References |
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