Teens Little Boys

Teens Little Boys




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Average Penis Size for Boys and Teens
Verywell Family's content is for informational and educational purposes only. Our website is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Ⓒ 2021 About, Inc. (Dotdash) — All rights reserved
Barbara Poncelet, CRNP, is a certified pediatric nurse practitioner specializing in teen health.
Medically reviewed by Tyra Tennyson Francis, MD on April 25, 2020
Tyra Tennyson Francis, MD, is a board-certified family medicine physician and currently serves as the medical director of an outpatient clinic.
Adolescence is a time for growth spurts and other changes spurred by the onset of puberty. For boys faced with these changes, it can be a time of great uncertainty as some will inevitably fall behind others in their development.
Among the key changes in the sexual maturation, boys will undergo as the testicles get larger and the scrotum begins to thin and redden. In tandem with these changes is the growth of the penis which can develop at different rates for different boys.
As sexual awareness increases, concerns about penis size may deepen, particularly if all other signs of puberty (including height, body hair, and changes in voice) are robust. Knowing what to expect—and what an "average" penis size really means—can help alleviate a lot of the stress.
The good news is that penis size is rarely a sign of a medical problem. With that being said, there are few answers about "normal" penis size that will satisfy an emotionally impatient teen.
Between the ages of 10 and 14, when most of the growth spurts occur, boys will often feel the need to "size up" with their peers, believing themselves to fall short if they are anything less than average. Even in boys as young as 11, the visible changes seen in others can quickly turn from a source of curiosity to one of anxiety.
To help dispel these fears, parents need to understand and share the facts about normal penis development with their sons if and when it becomes an issue.
Generally speaking, a boy's genitals will develop in somewhat predictable stages. According to longitudinal research from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, the stages of sexual maturation in boys break down roughly as follows:
What is important to note is that, unlike wet dreams and acne, there is no specific age by which the genitals will start to grow. In boys—even more so than girls—it can be difficult to know exactly when puberty will start and how it will develop.
For some, it may appear as an almost single event. In others, it may develop in fits and starts right through early high school. While boys in a family often follow similar growth patterns, there can even be variations among brothers that defy expectations.
Even if a penis appears small by the age of 14, there is still an opportunity for growth. With that being said, many parents will want to schedule an appointment with the family doctor if their son's penis hasn't started to grow after the appearance of body and facial hair.
Generally speaking, by the age of 18 to 19, little additional growth can be expected.
The average penis length by age, outlined in Adolescent and Young Adult Health Care: A Practical Guide by Dr. Lawrence Neinstein, should only serve as a guideline for genital development in boys.
It should not be used to check if a boy is developing "on schedule" (an action that may only underscore a boy's insecurity). Rather, it should be used as a reference if your son fears he is falling behind in relation to all other markers for puberty.
The approximate ranges of a non-erect penis by age are as follows:1
Because there may be errors in how the penis is measured, it is usually best to have the measurement done by a pediatrician or, better yet, an adolescent health specialist.
The diagnosis of an abnormally small penis would seem to be a pretty straightforward process, but it is actually not. While a physical exam may establish that a boy's penis is below what might be expected for his age, it cannot accurately predict how much growth may still occur. This is especially true for boys 14 and under who may not yet have developed the secondary physical characteristics of puberty.
A physical exam may be more telling between the ages of 15 and 16 when the penis is most likely to experience growth. But even then, there may be factors other than growth that explain a penis' abnormally short appearance.
One such example is childhood obesity in which excessive pelvic fat obscures an otherwise normal-sized penis. The same may occur if a boy has a very large frame, creating the impression that the penis is smaller than it is.
Less commonly, there are congenital conditions that limit how much of the penis is externally seen. Examples include penoscrotal webbing (in which the scrotum extends up the underside of the penis, creating an indistinct junction between the two) and phimosis (in which the foreskin is unable to retract).2
Micropenis, defined as a penis 2.5 deviations smaller than the mean average for the age, is an even less likely cause but can sometimes occur as a result of a genetic disorder (such as Klinefelter's syndrome) which impedes the production of testosterone during fetal development.
Generally speaking, after the age of 8 there is little a doctor can do to promote penis growth in boys. For boys 8 and under, testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) may be used, but, even then, it is really most effective in toddlers 3 years and under.
If used early enough, TRT (delivered in three intramuscular injections over 12 weeks) may increase the child's penis size to the reference range for his age. After 8 years of age, TRT tends to be far less effective.3
For older boys, surgery may be explored to treat concealed penis abnormalities. The approach can vary by case but may include circumcision or more extensive reconstructive procedures in which the skin of the penis is "degloved" and repositioned with sutures and skin grafts.
Penis enlargement surgery (phalloplasty) is not considered a reasonable option until later in life. The risk of complications may outweigh the perceived benefits, and the results tend to be variable at best.
While concerns about penis size may be understandable in boys going through puberty, it is unhelpful for those emotions to be echoed or reinforced by parents or family members.
Ultimately, penis size should never be considered a measurement of one's manhood or virility. These cultural attitudes only serve to undermine a boy's confidence at a time when he is only just starting to explore who he is.
If your son comes to you concerned about his penis size, take the time to discuss his feelings without diminishing them. In some cases, penis size may only be a symptom of a larger problem. In some cases, there may have been teasing at school or an underlying lack of confidence for which penis size is emblematic.
Whether the issue is physical or psychological, it often helps to work with a medical professional trained in adolescent health. By allowing an objective third-party into the conversation, you can avoid any suggestion that there is a "problem" that needs resolving.
Acknowledge your son's feelings and reassure him of his self-worth, but avoid false assurances and platitudes that may only add to his anxiety.
Get diet and wellness tips to help your kids stay healthy and happy.
Verywell Family uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
De jesus LE, Dekermacher S, Anderson KM. Severe forms of concealed penis without hypospadias: Surgical strategies. Indian J Urol. 2015;31(4):344-8. doi:10.4103/0970-1591.163308
Nerli RB, Guntaka AK, Patne PB, Hiremath MB. Penile growth in response to hormone treatment in children with micropenis. Indian J Urol. 2013;29(4):288–291. doi:10.4103/0970-1591.120107
Common Concerns Your Teen Might Have About Puberty
Learn About the Stages of Puberty in Boys
Helping Your Son Through the Changes of Puberty to Make It Less Difficult
Age and Sequence of Puberty in Girls and Boys
The Different Changes Your Tween Boy Will Go Through in Puberty
Learn the Stages and Signs of Puberty and How Parents Can Help
Why Small Bumps on the Penis Head Aren't Necessarily Signs of an STI
Tips for Teaching Your Tween Boy to Shave Safely
When to Worry About a Child’s Short Stature
When Do Girls Typically Stop Growing?
Verywell Family's content is for informational and educational purposes only. Our website is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Ⓒ 2021 About, Inc. (Dotdash) — All rights reserved
Verywell Family is part of the Dotdash publishing family.

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Boys aged 10 for sale in sex scandal
Jamie Doward reveals the plight of boys who are being forced into prostitution in British cities, hidden by their use of mobiles and the internet
They call it gridding. The boys use felt-tip pens to scrawl their names, ages and mobile phone numbers on the toilet walls.
Below each name is a list of likes and dislikes. In the former, words such as 'oral', 'fisting' and 'pissing' crop up regularly. 'Time-wasters', 'old men', 'queens' (those who overdramatise gay mannerisms) are common in the latter. Punters choose from the menu and dial accordingly.
Prices range from £5 to £20, depending on the 'trick' performed and the cost of drugs in whichever city the transaction is taking place. Many of the phone numbers are inked over by boys trying to see off rivals. Faecal stains and blood mark the toilet walls, delineating territory.
Young boys forced into prostitution are perceived not to exist. They cannot be found huddled under the sodium lamps of red-light districts. They do not drop in to drop-in centres. If they register in society's consciousness at all it is as 'rent boys' of popular fable, the willing, homosexual prostitutes who earn a mythical fortune in the backstreets of London's Soho.
But an Observer investigation in UK cities reveals that hundreds of boys, some as young as 10, are being forced to prostitute themselves daily while society looks the other way, reluctant to confront the issue.
'We still live in a homophobic society. As a nation we want to protect young women but there is a feeling boys should be able to look after themselves,' said Ady Davis, an outreach worker with the children's charity Barnardo's based in Newcastle upon Tyne.
The little research that has been done into the problem exposes this feeling as a lie. A small-scale survey carried out in Newcastle last month showed that around a third of children known to have been abused through prostitution were boys.
Of the 15 young people identified in the survey carried out over the last couple of months, five were male. Researchers gleaned the information from sending out questionnaires to 120 agencies working with children. Only 10 have replied so far, and four of these identified children at risk. 'The numbers will undoubtedly grow. If four services have identified 15 young people, most of them children, who are actually being sexually exploited, what might be uncovered if the remaining 100-plus services provide us with information?' Davis asked.
A paucity of information makes gauging the problem difficult. Unlike girls, boys forced into prostitution tend to act alone, making it difficult to build a true picture of what is happening. Their 'trade' does not take place on the streets but at pre-arranged destinations: a bedsit, a car in a lay-by, a public toilet. The few attempts to reach out to them by charities and welfare groups are fraught with problems.
'You have to build up trust. It's a short word, but it's got a big meaning,' said Paul Richardson, an outreach worker in Middlesbrough and one of the few people in his field who works exclusively with boys forced into prostitution.
Richardson knows why his job is difficult. 'If I had one wish it would be to take the stigma away. The boys just can't bring themselves to come forward and talk about what they do. Many are not homosexual and they feel ashamed,' he said.
The clients too are corrupted by the stigma. Many are married men with children who are in denial about their sexuality. Some even believe they are helping the boys by paying them.
'There is no such thing as a "child prostitute". Paying for sex with children makes the men child abusers, not punters. Paying money to a desperate child, or feeding their drug habit, doesn't change the nature of the act,' said Chris Hanvey, UK director of operations at Barnardo's.
In a new initiative to be launched this week, Richardson and Davis will start texting and emailing the boys whose numbers and addresses they discover graffitied around the north east of England, asking them if they need help to escape the world they are immersed in.
The pilot project, which will spread across the country if it proves successful, comes after a six-month survey concluded earlier this year that, of the 378 children identified as at risk of being abused through prostitution in the Stockton-on-Tees area, 187 were male.
Recently a project set up to help young girls trapped in the sex trade on Merseyside uncovered evidence that scores of boys - one only 10 years old - were being abused.
'We've worked with about 200 girls and young women involved in sexual exploitation since the project started in 2000, and have noticed that there are substantial numbers of boys involved as well,' said Jaci Quennell, the project's children's services manager.
'It's hard to assess the numbers because it's a hidden problem, but it's likely to be about 10 times bigger than it appears.'
Further investigations by The Observer confirm a similar picture in Glasgow, London and Middlesbrough.
Most of the boys forced to sell themselves have run away from home. Many are homeless. Some have been abused by family members. Only around half of them describe themselves as homosexual. The need to buy drink and drugs looms large in their motivation.
Sometimes a friend introduces them to the scene; often it is forced upon them by a relative. Lee, who ran away from a violent home at 12 and whose story was supplied to The Observer by a Barnardo's worker in Glasgow, is typical of those who end up prostituting themselves.
'I got taken into care. I did not like it there. The other boys bullied me and gave me a hard time. I started running away again, sometimes living on the streets, sometimes kipping with mates.
'Someone told me how I could make money without the police getting to know. I hated it at first, but the other guys doing it were just like me. It wasn't as if I was gay. It was just for the money.'
New technology has transformed the mechanics of procuring a young boy for sex. Picture phones allow the boys to advertise themselves to prospective clients, while the internet connects them to an illicit national marketplace.
'Near where I worked there was a 24-hour internet cafe,' recalled Lee. 'All I had to do was pay £3 or £4 and I got to stay there all night. I started to use the computers and logged on to chat rooms. I got talking to these other guys who also "worked".
'They used to make contact with the punters over the internet. It was getting harder to survive on the streets and I was always starving. The other guys were always trying to set me up with punters and I eventually said, Aye, why no'.'
Once in, however, boys find it almost impossible to escape the vortex of prostitution. Ashamed of acknowledging their problem, boys, much more than girls, find it difficult to approach the authorities for help.
While social services are geared to help females, there are few dedicated specialists working with boys.
Resources and personnel are acutely scarce. Alternative housing, vital to ensuring the boys escape their destructive lifestyles, is often non-existent.
'The difficulty with this is it's hidden. It doesn't present itself with the urgency that some of the other Home Office agenda items do,' Hanvey said.
Jay, now 21, has been forced to work as a prostitute for five years. He was introduced to the scene by Dom, 25, who took him from his native Newcastle down south, promising him they could make far more money if they moved. But soon Dom had begun a relationship with a 14-year-old boy, and threw Jay out.
'I had nowhere to stay, no money, nothing, so I did the only thing I know how to do, and sold sex. I still do,' Jay told an outreach worker who recorded his story for this newspaper.
'I don't want to any more but I don't know what else to do. I've tried stopping but I get really depressed.
'There's nothing to do. I can't get a job. The first question you get asked is: why haven't you had a job before? You can't really say "I have - I've been a rent boy for the last x years".'
Further problems emerge as the boys mature. 'Young men have a shelf life. Once they lose their baby-face looks they're washed up,' said Daljeet Dagon, a charity outreach manager who works with prostitutes in Glasgow.
Some men escape the scene. Others end up using the knowledge they have gleaned to become pimps, dragging a fresh group of young boys into their world.
As in all industries there is a hierarchy. 'Boys might start off with mutual masturbation, then move on to oral, then penetrative sex.
'People will pay more for unprotected sex. A boy might think "I could do one bloke unprotected for the amount I would make from five using protection",' Davis said.
Breaking out of the cycle often means getting off crack or heroin. The Stockton research suggested that 94 per cent of children forced into prostitution spent some of their earnings on drugs.
Wendy Shepherd, a project manager in the north east with about a decade's experience, said: 'Over the years it's become less about money. When I first started out it was £60, £50. Today it's hardly ever mentioned.
'The guys who are purchasing will purchase with a wrap of heroin. There is very little money changing hands these days in what we traditionally term prostitution.'
Shepherd said the days of 'simply cleaning toilet walls of graffiti,' had passed. 'We need to do proper observations of those we're concerned about. We need to offer boys help to encourage them to come forward.'
But until society confronts its final taboo and sees beyond the 'rent boy' tag, there seems little hope they will have the courage to come out of the shadows.
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