By Clare Collins, University of Newcastle
Some like it hot, some like it iced, and some just don’t like it at all. Until recently, coffee was on the list of habits to break if you really wanted to be healthy.
Not any more. Systematic reviews of the research – the most powerful method to weigh up scientific evidence – judge the current evidence as mostly in favour of drinking coffee. Coffee drinking is linked to a decreased risk of premature death, type 2 diabetes and some types of cancer.
However, some people will need to be cautious of the amount. Heavy coffee intake has been linked to an increased risk of lung cancer and can exacerbate heart problems.
1. Life expectancy
Coffee drinkers live longer. A review of 20 studies including more than 970,000 people found those who usually drank the most coffee had a 14 per cent lower risk of dying prematurely from any cause, compared with those who drank the least.
Even drinking just one to two cups a day conferred an 8 per cent lower risk.
Decaffeinated coffee drinkers who had two to four cups a day still had a 14 per cent lower relative risk of premature death than those who didn’t drink coffee at all.
2. Liver cancer
Coffee drinkers, particularly men, have a lower risk of liver cancer. This is important as liver disease is the sixth most common cancer in the world and is more common in men.
Results from six studies, based on the total number of cups of coffee drunk per day, found the relative risk of liver cancer was 14 per cent lower for every extra cup.