Can you be too tall?
- Published
Recently it was reported that President Barack Obama's daughter, Malia, 12, has reached the height of 175 cm (5ft 9in).
It has highlighted once more the social implications of being tall for your age.
In the past, some parents have wished for their tall girls to be shorter, and the other way round for boys - and requested medical intervention.
Families are advised to see a GP if worried about their children's growth, as it could have an underlying reason.
But when there is no diagnosis of an underlying medical problem, it is now rare in the UK for medical treatment to be given to limit or boost children's height for purely social reasons.
Growth hormone is not currently offered by the NHS, but it is available privately. In the US this treatment can cost up to $50,000 (£31,975) per year if a child needs high doses.
Until the 1990s, however, it was common for hormone treatment to be offered to girls to limit their adult height. It was felt that girls who were "too tall" would be unhappy and would never get married.
Peter Hindmarsh and Tim Cole of the Institute of Child Health at University College, London, say they still get a few families who consult them hoping to stop their daughter from growing too tall.
Tall girls
The treatment they can offer involves giving girls synthetic oestrogen in fairly low doses, which leads to the onset of puberty, and limits growth.
Nowadays it is rare for families to take up this treatment, said Prof Hindmarsh.
"I recently bumped into one of the last girls we treated, about seven or eight years ago, on a railway station," he explained.
"She is now aged 25 or so and is about 6ft 2in and was wearing huge platforms, so she was effectively about the same height that she would have ended up without treatment."
He said this young woman seemed very comfortable with her height.
Experts say families are right to consult a GP if their child appears to be at the upper limits of growth, because there are syndromes that cause other medical problems, but which have as their main symptom tall stature in childhood.
Marfan Syndrome, which can cause problems with the eyes, heart, and major blood vessels, is usually noticed because a child grows very tall.
Treatment
However, treating girls with oestrogen to limit their adult height was common from the 1950s through the 1990s in many countries - especially Australia, the US, the Netherlands and Scandinavia.
Psychologists have looked at whether this made girls any happier. An Australian study compared girls who had thought about being treated, but decided not to, with those who had gone ahead with treatment.
They followed up the girls when they were between 23 and 55 years of age, and found that women who had decided to get treatment were no less likely to have suffered mental health problems.
In the US, too, a study looked at women in the general population and in a survey of nearly 60,000 adults found that tall women were generally very happy with their height - 77% of women who were 183cm (6ft) were happy with their height.
One classic reason for families wanting their girls to reach a shorter adult height has been that parents were worried their daughter might never marry.
But the US study also found that it made little difference how tall women were. Even the tallest women were very likely to be in a relationship.
Short boys
At the other end of the spectrum, far more families seek help for a short son than a daughter. As with very tall children, some children are short because they have a clinical syndrome, and some are just short - they have no hormone deficiency or other problems.
If children have the genetic disorder Turner Syndrome, a growth hormone deficiency or some other syndromes, NHS guidelines allow for growth hormone treatment to be given to increase height.
Tam Fry, chairman of parent support charity, the Child Growth Foundation, said: "It is a possibility that families may gloss over a girl who is growing slowly - if you've got boys and girls in the family, you still need to monitor their height progress to be reassured they are growing properly."
Tom Wyllie is 17, and lives in Northumberland. When he was a child, his parents noticed he was not growing as they expected.
He was diagnosed as needing growth hormone supplements for medical reasons and he still has a daily injection.
He has reached his final height of 157 cm (5ft 2in). But he has not let it stop him aim for his goal - to be a professional musical theatre actor. He has already been in Oliver!, Annie, Godspell, Chicago and has auditioned for Britain's Got Talent.
"I've been performing pretty much all my life, it's been my lifelong ambition, since the age of six," said Tom.
Tom Wyllie says that the girls on his drama course are not concerned that he is short.
"All the girls are about my height or a bit taller, and they are not bothered if they play with me as the romantic lead."
His says his main problem is that he looks a little younger than he is, and often has to show ID at the cinema or when renting a 15-rated DVD.
- Published3 September 2010