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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Worried Girls May Be Short Women

The Washington Post

As if young girls don’t have enough to worry about as they grow toward womanhood, a study has come up with something new: Worrying may keep them from growing as tall as their less-anxious peers.

A study by New York psychiatrist Daniel Pine and other researchers indicated that girls exhibiting constant signs of anxiety during childhood turned out to be as much as 2 inches shorter than girls who were less worried. Those who exhibited anxiety were twice as likely to be no taller than 5-feet-4 as adults.

Researchers hypothesized that the production of human growth hormone may be blunted by excess worry, or anxiety, as girls grow into adulthood.