Coffee may taste good and get you going in the morning, but what will it do for your health?
A growing body of research shows that coffee drinkers, compared to nondrinkers, are:
- less likely to have type 2 diabetes, Parkinson's disease, and dementia
- have fewer cases of certain cancers, heart rhythm problems, and strokes
“There is certainly much more good news than bad news, in terms of
coffee and health,” says Frank Hu, MD, MPH, PhD, nutrition and
epidemiology professor at the Harvard School of Public Health.
But (you knew there would be a “but,” didn’t you?) coffee isn't proven to prevent those conditions.
Researchers don't ask people to drink or skip coffee for the sake
of science. Instead, they ask them about their coffee habits. Those
studies can't show cause and effect. It's possible that coffee drinkers
have other advantages, such as better diets, more exercise, or
protective genes.
So there isn't solid proof. But there are signs of potential health perks -- and a few cautions.
If you're like the average American, who downed 416 8-ounce cups
of coffee in 2009 (by the World Resources Institute's estimates), you
might want to know what all that java is doing for you, or to you.
Here is a condition-by-condition look at the research.
Type 2 Diabetes
Hu calls the data on coffee and type 2 diabetes "pretty solid," based on more than 15 published studies.
"The vast majority of those studies have shown a benefit of
coffee on the prevention of diabetes. And now there is also evidence
that decaffeinated coffee may have the same benefit as regular coffee,”
Hu tells WebMD.
In 2005, Hu's team reviewed nine studies on coffee and type 2
diabetes. Of more than 193,000 people, those who said they drank more
than six or seven cups daily were 35% less likely to have type 2
diabetes than people who drank fewer than two cups daily. There was a
smaller perk -- a 28% lower risk -- for people who drank 4-6 cups a day.
The findings held regardless of sex, weight, or geographic location
(U.S. or Europe).
More recently, Australian researchers looked at 18 studies of
nearly 458,000 people. They found a 7% drop in the odds of having type 2
diabetes for every additional cup of coffee drunk daily. There were
similar risk reductions for decaf coffee drinkers and tea drinkers. But
the researchers cautioned that data from some of the smaller studies
they reviewed may be less reliable. So it's possible that they
overestimated the strength of the link between heavy coffee drinking and
diabetes.
How might coffee keep diabetes at bay?
“It’s the whole package,” Hu says. He points to antioxidants --
nutrients that help prevent tissue damage caused by molecules called
oxygen-free radicals. “We know that coffee has a very strong antioxidant
capacity," Hu says.
Coffee also contains minerals such as magnesium and chromium,
which help the body use the hormone insulin, which controls blood sugar
(glucose). In type 2 diabetes, the body loses its ability to use insulin
and regulate blood sugar effectively.
It's probably not the caffeine, though. Based on studies of decaf
coffee, “I think we can safely say that the benefits are not likely to
be due to caffeine," Hu says.
No comments:
Post a Comment