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Science

Drinking Six or More Coffees a Day Can Be Detrimental To Your Health, New Study Reveals (unisa.edu.au) 147

While the pros and cons of drinking coffee have been debated for decades, new research from the University of South Australia reveals that drinking six or more coffees a day can be detrimental to your health, increasing your risk of heart disease by up to 22 percent. From a report: In Australia, one in six people are affected by cardiovascular disease. It is a major cause of death with one person dying from the disease every 12 minutes. According to the World Health Organization, cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death, yet one of the most preventable. Investigating the association of long-term coffee consumption and cardiovascular disease, UniSA researchers Dr Ang Zhou and Professor Elina Hypponen of the Australian Centre for Precision Health say their research confirms the point at which excess caffeine can cause high blood pressure, a precursor to heart disease.

This is the first time an upper limit has been placed on safe coffee consumption and cardiovascular health. "Coffee is the most commonly consumed stimulant in the world -- it wakes us up, boosts our energy and helps us focus -- but people are always asking 'How much caffeine is too much?'," Prof Hypponen says. "Most people would agree that if you drink a lot of coffee, you might feel jittery, irritable or perhaps even nauseous -- that's because caffeine helps your body work faster and harder, but it is also likely to suggest that you may have reached your limit for the time being.

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Drinking Six or More Coffees a Day Can Be Detrimental To Your Health, New Study Reveals

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  • by Dorianny ( 1847922 ) on Monday May 13, 2019 @05:22PM (#58586782) Journal
    6 cups of coffee a day seems like a lot but between coffee, tea, soda and energy drinks many people consume far more caffeine then they realize
  • six or more coffees a day

    How much is "a coffee"? I have two 16 oz cups per day. So, I'm 4 coffees short of danger?

    • 100-120mg is a useful approximation of a reasonably strong cup of coffee.

      Added caffeine in beverages is limited to 80mg/8 fl oz. in the US. Virtually every "energy drink" contains this amount.

      https://cspinet.org/eating-hea... [cspinet.org]

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      So the actual paper cites 6 cups per day (vs the article's "6 coffees per day"). But what size cups? Standard, 8oz (237ml) cups? Or we talking self-reported "cups" of indeterminate size?
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • WTF? A cup of coffee is about 30 oz and is made with about a tenth of a pound of coffee beans in a large french press.

          More than six might be unhealthy, I'll grant that.

          • Well,

            real coffee is made like this:
            you pour about half a pound of grinded coffee into a flat can on the fire.
            Carefully dampen it with water.
            When steam shows up put in a horse show.
            If the horse show sinks: the coffee is to weak.

            I hope that helped ...

        • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
          You had trouble finding sources that said 1 cup = 8 fl oz? That seems odd.
    • When using an electric coffeemaker a "cup" is approximately 5 fluid ounces.
       
      Having not RTFA I don't know if they specified the volume of coffee they were writing about but your 32 ounces is, in coffeemaker lingo, a bit more than 6 "cups" of coffee.

  • by Ashthon ( 5513156 ) on Monday May 13, 2019 @05:26PM (#58586808)

    There's strong coffee, weak coffee, large cups, small cups. Instead of coming up with a meaningless measure, why not just tell us how many milligrams of caffeine it's safe to consume?

    According to Wikipedia [wikipedia.org], "For the general population of healthy adults, Health Canada advises a daily intake of no more than 400 mg." It also tells us, "A cup of coffee contains 80–175 mg of caffeine, depending on what 'bean' (seed) is used and how it is prepared."

    So, depending on the type of bean, three cups could be too many, and this advice of "six or more coffees" is terrible.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      They tried doing just that in the experiment, but the rats all wanted to customize their Starbucks order.

    • As a scientifically inclined lazy bastard, I need some hard numbers. Not ranges and not guesswork. A 37 slide deck will do just fine. With sources.
    • why not just tell us how many milligrams of caffeine it's safe to consume?

      Did they prove that caffeine is the variable? 6 cups of anything with "four sugars" is already known to contribute to heart disease.

  • Technically, by the time most humans have consumed their sixth cup of coffee, they change from a human to a hummingbird. That might skew the results somewhat.
    • After my sixth cup I just may be vaguely aware of my surroundings. The rest of you are just lightweights or can’t hold your caffeine.

      I can think of plenty of other flaws in the study, but can’t access the full text to see how well designed the study is.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 13, 2019 @05:31PM (#58586830)

    ... but I did not say anything, because I'm not a beer drinker.

    Then they came for the coffee, but I did not say anything, because I'm not a coffee drinker.

    Then they came for me, because I flash people on the public bus, but little did they know that being arrested by burly police officers had long been my erotic fantasy, and so I also came for them.

    CAPTCHA: recoil

  • Excessive amounts of stimulants are bad for you!? Who knew!?

    There's no such thing as free energy folks.

  • by avandesande ( 143899 ) on Monday May 13, 2019 @05:48PM (#58586892) Journal
    Daenerys obviously ignored this advice before the battle
  • Keeping me from drinking my six cups of coffee.

  • Last year they said drinking 12 cups of coffee a day makes you immortal... like I'm going to believe this now! I still have 8 cups to go today...

  • A few years ago I worked with a woman who drank 2-3 *pots* (standard 12-cup Bunn decanters [bunn.com]) of coffee during the workday.

    She seemed fine.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Unfortunately it is a well know fact that people with heart disease feel like drinking more coffee than normal people. How did they conduct their research? Obviously by monitoring heart condition and asking subjects how much coffee they drink each day.

    When will we see and end to this fake research which cannot, and does not, discern the difference between cause and effect?

  • Did they mean six cups of coffee? Is that six, 6-fl.oz-cups as coffee is usually measured, or is it six 20-fl.oz Starbucks Venti sized cups?

    Or perhaps this means six different kinds of coffee, just as "two waters" might mean New York City tap water (the first) and Newark New Jersey tap water (the other).

    Or we could try using mass nouns like "water," "software," and "hardware" correctly. You don't drink two waters [unless, see above] and you don't have two "softwares." *sigh*

    • by Falos ( 2905315 )

      I used to walk down to the radio shack and get a pound of software every sunday, for poppop to enjoy by the fire.

  • Only four double shots of espresso a day, I should be fine.

  • Reading 6 or More /. clickbaits can be detrimental to your self respect.

    People who advocate decaf coffee, sugar free snacks and drinks, safe sex? Fuck'em with a coca cola freeze pop that you used before.

  • by mamba-mamba ( 445365 ) on Monday May 13, 2019 @07:13PM (#58587206)

    A prospective study such as this one is INCAPABLE of showing what the article headline claimed.

    What it showed is an association or correlation between coffee consumption and cardio-vascular disease (CVD). But in order to show what is claimed (that coffee consumption increases risk of CVD), it would be necessary to do a controlled study where participants are randomized into two groups, and one group is given coffee while the other is not. Otherwise there could be many explanations for the correlation.

    Furthermore, risk of CVD is the wrong thing to look at in the first place. They should be looking at all-cause mortality, because, for all we know, coffee consumption could reduce risk of stroke or cancer, counteracting the increased risk (if any) of CVD.

    I have been watching studies on coffee and caffeine for decades now, and there has never been a study able to link coffee consumption to any increase in mortality. The only thing we know for sure is that it can disrupt sleep, and that quitting can cause withdrawal symptoms. The results in this study are definitely not convincing enough to change the status quo, in my opinion.

  • About two weeks till the average nutritionist realizes that THIS month coffee is actually good for you - next month will be different, this being coffee and nutritionists.

  • Drinking Six or More Coffees a Day Can Be Detrimental To Your Health, New Study Reveals

    I find that surprising, given that the current paradigm among the cardiovascular community is that coffee is good for you:
    - Large meta-analysis studies initially showed that 3 to 5 coffees per day substantially increased lifespan (not decreased, as had once been thought.
    - Later studies confirmed and expanded it.
    - ". ..inverse associations were observed for deaths due to heart disease, cancer, respi

    • Also: It's not just the US. I think this started in Britain or the E.U. A recent confirming study was from Italy.

      • Well,
        the main differences between the US and Italy or France (or the EU) are:
        * here we have real coffee
        * no one cares about studies

    • I find that surprising, given that the current paradigm among the cardiovascular community is that coffee is good for you:

      The problem is that if you don't like the "current paradigm" just wait. The pendulum just oscillates back and forth.

      The only real takeaway from the paper is: of all of the studies, this is one of them.

      • The problem is that if you don't like the "current paradigm" just wait. The pendulum just oscillates back and forth.

        The nice thing about the scientific method is that (when it hasn't been too corrupted) such oscillations are damped. Paradigms may change, but they tend to be a convergent series, not an ongoing alternation.

        • Sadly, I don't see any dampening in this area. Too many companies have a vested interest in driving the position of the pendulum in one direction or another.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Pretty sure I already addressed this in my post, but whatever....
  • OK, so it's not the coffee, it's the caffeine?

    You do realize that not all coffee that people drink has caffeine, right?

    Gar, but that bugs me. Same with stories about studies showing that "X sodas per day causes Y." OK, how? Citric acid? Carbonic acid? Caffeine? You do realize that all sodas aren't the same, right?

    • by Cederic ( 9623 )

      Even caffeinated coffee deviates substantially in its levels of caffeine.

      Last time I had an engineer here to fix my boiler he asked for strong coffee. I gave him what I normally drink myself and it was too strong for him.

    • You do realize that not all coffee that people drink has caffeine, right?

      That's why the study identified drinkers of decaf vs. regular. Yes, I think they realize that not all coffee has caffeine.

  • They needed a study to come up with this conclusion? Guess that was CORI - Captain Obvious Research Institute once again.

  • Too much? TOO MUCH!??!?!

    Die! Die you dirty sons of bitches! MORE COFFEE!

  • Is this 6 espressos, or 6 "venti" extra shot Americanos? Or a standard cup measure of 250ml, so 1.5 litres of coffee. And how strong? How many spoons of instant coffee is this? What if I don't drink coffee, I only drink Red Bull or Monster?

    Saying just "6 cups of coffee" doesn't tell me enough about how much caffeine they are saying is problematic. It doesn't appear to be mentioned anywhere. Even just an addition "6 cups of coffee, or xxx mg of caffeine, ..." would suffice.

    In an attempt to answer my ow

  • I read a quote today on social media

    "Give me Coffee to change the things I can.. And Wine to accept those that I cannot"

The explanation requiring the fewest assumptions is the most likely to be correct. -- William of Occam

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