You bring up a solid point that coffee doesn’t stunt growth and that the myth may be connected to older concerns about osteoporosis. I appreciate that you referenced WebMD—it's a decent general resource—but it’s worth noting that it's more of a health overview site than a deep medical authority. It often summarizes mainstream views without diving into the original studies, so it’s important to trace their claims back to primary sources when possible.
Also, you mention that coffee doesn’t necessarily have great health benefits, which I’d push back on a bit. There's actually growing research from places like Harvard Health and the Mayo Clinic suggesting moderate coffee consumption may be linked to benefits like reduced risk of Parkinson’s, type 2 diabetes, and certain liver diseases. Of course, that doesn’t mean coffee is a health drink, but it’s more nuanced than just saying it lacks benefits.
I think you made a great point about coffee’s effect on sleep and heart rate—that’s real, especially for people sensitive to caffeine. But I’d also say that those are effects of caffeine in general, not coffee specifically. So maybe the bigger question is about how much and when caffeine is consumed, not whether coffee is inherently harmful.
Would love to know if you think those potential health benefits outweigh the sleep/focus trade-offs or if it really just depends on the person.