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Drinking Coffee Can Help You Live Longer
There are a lot of reasons to drink coffee–especially when it’s harvested, roasted, and brewed in a way that maximizes its healthful and flavorful qualities. It tastes great first thing in the morning or as an afternoon pick me up. It boosts energy and mental acuity to help you accomplish your daily tasks. You may have also heard about how it provides an infusion of antioxidants to help prevent a bevy of diseases.
All these things are true. But even more than that, coffee is also one of the keys to overall longevity. This means that a healthy coffee habit can literally prevent an early death.
The results from a number of studies support this exciting news, and some research also points to a connection between coffee and an anti-inflammatory response in the body. A 2006 paper by Andersen et al. examined that connection as part of the Iowa Women’s Health study. The researchers followed the health and lifespan of over 40,000 women ages 55–69 for a total of fifteen years. They excluded pre-existing cardiovascular diseases, liver cirrhosis, diabetes, and cancer to make sure they would be able to tell what kind of difference coffee was making without worrying about other factors. At the end of the study, approximately 27,000 subjects remained alive and the rest had passed away. Researchers found that coffee had an antioxidant effect that lessened the chance of cardiovascular and other inflammatory diseases in subjects who drank up to 5 cups of coffee each day.
“Three to five cups of coffee a day, is associated with lower risk in total mortality and mortality from several causes like diabetes, cardiovascular disease and suicide.”
— Frank Hu–Harvard professor of nutrition and epidemiology
According to the Center for Disease Control, cardiovascular disease and cancer are both in the top three causes of death in the United States. In 2015, cardiovascular disease killed 633,842 people while cancer caused the deaths of 595,930. Coffee drinkers have demonstrated a 30% lower chance of congestive heart failure as well as varying levels of lowered risk against different types of cancers. Diabetes breaks the top ten listed causes of death in the US as well, with 79,535 people dying of it in 2015. Coffee has been proven to safeguard against and even help reverse type 2 diabetes, with studies showing that people who have six cups per day reduced their risk of the disease by 33%.
Increase longevity all over the world
Coffee’s effects on longevity are seen all over the world. A cohort study that took place over 16 years and across ten European countries showed that the inverse relationship between coffee drinking and mortality did not change from one country to another. The researchers found not only a decreased risk of cardiovascular disease and cancer but also digestive disorders in men and cerebrovascular diseases in women, such as strokes.
The effectiveness of coffee in promoting longevity has been verified across multiple ethnicities–not just in people of European descent. A study published in 2017 by Park et al. investigated coffee’s effects on longevity in African Americans, Native Hawaiians, Japanese Americans, Latinos, and whites that were 45 to 75 years old. Data was collected between 2003 and 2015. There was a .88 hazard ratio for people who drank one cup per day, .82 for 2 to 3 cups a day as well as for more than 4 cups per day. While there was a slight inverse trend in the Native Hawaiian population, the study demonstrated that for African Americans, Japanese Americans, Latinos, and Whites, coffee was correlated with an overall longer life. The researchers also found these results to be the same for those who drank caffeinated coffee and those who drank decaf.
Coffee keeps you alive
Why is coffee so good at keeping us alive? Part of the answer lies in the inflammation inhibiting the power of antioxidants, that come into play time and time again in disease prevention and treatment. Heart disease, diabetes, and cancers all have an inflammatory component that can be reduced by large doses of antioxidants.
Interestingly, coffee was also shown in a 2015 study to help strands of DNA keep their integrity instead of breaking. The ends of DNA strands are called telomeres and are often compared to the plastic ends of shoelaces. Scientists have discovered that one of the major signs of aging is shortened and broken telomeres. The breakdown leads to a number of health problems from damaged, sagging skin to cancer. Coffee’s protective effects against oxidation and free radical damage may be part of what helps keep DNA integrity. The fact that coffee delays DNA breakage is evidence that coffee actually can help keep us looking and feeling youthful!
It’s important, however, to be careful about other lifestyle factors besides coffee drinking. While healthy coffee and the antioxidants it contains can protect the body from disease, enough smoking, alcohol, stress, or sleep deprivation can still take a toll on the body and threaten to undo all coffee’s good qualities. For example, most studies regarding coffee and longevity have excluded smokers from their data due to the major health risk that smoking poses. It’s important when you use coffee as a supplement to your health to make sure you’re also doing what you can to keep other parts of your lifestyle on the up and up. That way you can really reap the benefits of high-antioxidant, fresh coffee like Palinoia Coffee.
For more information about coffee and its health benefits for the body, visit Palinoia Coffee. You can also check out our organic coffee selections for the best option for your health.
Sources:
- https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/leading-causes-of-death.htm
- Zhang et al_2009_Coffee Consumption and Risk of Cardiovascular Diseases and All-Cause Mortality Among Men With Type 2 Diabetes
- Bakuradze et al_2015_Consumption of a dark roast coffee decreases the level of spontaneous DNA strand breaks: a randomized controlled trial.
- Andersen et al_2006_Consumption of coffee tied to decrease risk of death attributed to inflammatory or cardiovascular diseases
- Park et al_2017_Association of Coffee Consumption With Total and Cause-Specific Mortality Among Nonwhite Populations