Is Coffee Healthy or Bad?
Considering all the past concern about possible health risks from
drinking coffee, newer reports of coffee’s possible protective effects
may leave many people confused.
Overall, recent
studies suggest that coffee (regular and decaffeinated) may offer a
variety of health benefits against diseases such as cancer and diabetes.
However, coffee may not deserve a place in the same category with other
healthful foods like vegetables, fruits and whole grains.
Laboratory studies suggest that the
anti-inflammatory, antioxidant compounds in coffee could help reduce
risk of cancer. Coffee also has a tendency to speed the passage of waste
through the digestive tract. Potentially, this may lessen the time that
cancer-causing compounds spend in contact with the intestinal tract,
which could reduce the risk of colon cancer. Population studies,
however, tend to split between coffee intake having no effect on or
reducing risk of breast and colon cancer.
Diabetes Prevention
The case for coffee’s ability to protect
against diabetes is strengthened by several recent studies. In the Iowa
Women’s Health Study, more than 28,000 women were followed for 11 years.
The women who drank four or more cups of coffee daily were about 20
percent less likely to develop diabetes. That became a 30 to 40 percent
drop among those who drank decaf coffee.
A study in Finland
linked consumption of three to six cups of coffee per day with a 25
percent lower risk of diabetes. In both studies, benefits were seen
after adjusting for other diabetes risks, such as weight, diet, and
activity level. Several studies now link moderate coffee consumption
with lower risk of Type 2 diabetes. Researchers are working to
understand the potential advantage of decaf versus regular coffee and
how weight control is involved.
Potential increased
risk of high blood pressure and heart disease has been one of the
long-standing concerns about coffee. Recent studies confirm that
caffeine can raise blood pressure, but this effect is observed with soft
drinks, not coffee. Laboratory studies suggest that perhaps coffee’s
healthful compounds can counterbalance the blood-pressure raising
effects of caffeine.
In the Iowa Women’s
Health Study noted above, four to five cups of coffee a day were linked
with a 19 percent lower risk of heart-related death. Other studies have
found no effect of coffee consumption on heart disease risk. But people
should follow their doctor’s advice.
Coffee does warrant some cautions, however.
Both regular and decaf coffee relax the muscle that keeps stomach acids
from rising into the throat, so those with heartburn or reflux disease (GERD)
are encouraged to avoid or strictly limit coffee. People with trouble
sleeping should limit or avoid caffeinated coffee.
Studies now suggest it is unnecessary for
pregnant women to completely avoid caffeinated coffee. Until the impact
of caffeine is more clearly understood, however, many experts suggest
that pregnant women limit their daily caffeine from coffee, soft drinks
and other sources to about 300 mg, the equivalent of three cups of
regular coffee.
It’s exciting that
something as simple as drinking coffee might help lower our risk of
cancer, diabetes and heart disease. However, while brewed coffee (not
instant) is a concentrated source of antioxidants, it can’t be a
substitute for berries, legumes, nuts, and other fruits and vegetables
that provide antioxidants along with a wide range of vitamins,
protective compounds and dietary fiber.