The results don't necessarily mean coffee directly prevents people
from dying, but researchers suggest they should at least reassure
people who can't get by without their daily cup of joe.
"It’s premature that people start consuming coffee to improve health
outcomes," said Alice Lichtenstein, director of the Cardiovascular
Nutrition Laboratory at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research
Center on Aging at Tufts University in Boston. "However, if they do
so, they should probably do it without a lot of concern."
"I think for some people, it’s going to put their minds at ease,"
said Lichtenstein, who wasn't involved with either of the new
studies.
Previous research from the United States and Japan found a reduced
risk of death among coffee drinkers, but little was known about
whether such a link also existed in Europe, where coffee-drinking
habits vary between countries.
People in Denmark drink larger quantities of coffee than Italians
who drink smaller and stronger drinks like espresso, for example.
For one of the new studies published in the Annals of Internal
Medicine, the authors examined data collected over about 16 years
from 521,330 people living in 10 European countries. There were
41,693 deaths over the study period.
Men who reported drinking the most coffee were about 12 percent less
likely to die during the follow-up period, compared to men who
didn't drink coffee. Similarly, women who drank the most coffee were
about 7 percent less likely to die during that time than women who
didn't drink any.
Despite the people being so different from country to country, the
researchers saw a consistent relationship, said co-lead author Neil
Murphy, of the Inter Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon, France.
They found coffee tied to a reduced risk of death from digestive
diseases among both men and women, along with a decreased risk of
death from circulatory and cerebrovascular diseases among women.
Women with the biggest coffee habit, however, had an increased risk
of death from ovarian cancer.
"A lot more research is needed to tease apart what it is in coffee
that might be having these effects," Murphy told Reuters Health.
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Until more is known, he, too, said the findings at least suggest
coffee isn't detrimental to people's health.
A second study also looked at coffee consumption among diverse
populations in the U.S.
"Finding in one population doesn’t necessarily apply to others,"
said V. Wendy Setiawan, of the Keck School of Medicine at the
University of Southern California in Los Angeles.
For their study, the researchers analyzed data on 185,855 people
aged 45 to 75 years who were African American, Native Hawaiian,
Japanese American, Latino or white.
Over roughly 16 years of follow up, 58,397 people died.
Compared to people who drank no coffee, those who drank one cup per
day were 12 percent less likely to die during follow up. People who
drank two or more cups per day were 18 percent less likely to die.
Setiawan also said their study can't say what is behind the link
between coffee and lower risk of death.
"Caffeine is the most studied compound, but we see similar patterns
among people who drink decaffeinated," she said.
Lichtenstein also said it could be that people who drink coffee
aren't drinking other beverages with a lot of calories like apple
juice.
"I always felt its one of the few things that I enjoy that doesn’t
have calories," she said.
Of course, she said that doesn't apply if people add a lot of cream
and sugar.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2ubjjxL, http://bit.ly/2v5ejam and http://bit.ly/2sIty8A
Annals of Internal Medicine, online July 10, 2017.
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