Coffee and Health: Health Benefits of Coffee
Coffee has been a medical whipping boy for so
long that it may come as a surprise that recent research suggests
that drinking moderate amounts of coffee (two to four cups per
day) provides a wide range of health benefits. Most of these benefits
have been identified through statistical studies that track a
large group of subjects over the course of years and match incidence
of various diseases with individual habits, like drinking coffee,
meanwhile controlling for other variables that may influence that
relationship. According to a spate of such recent studies moderate
coffee drinking may lower the risk of colon cancer by about 25%,
gallstones by 45%, cirrhosis of the liver by 80%, and Parkinson's
disease by 50% to as much as 80%. Other benefits include 25% reduction
in onset of attacks among asthma sufferers and, at least among
a large group of female nurses tracked over many years, fewer
suicides.
In addition, some studies have indicated that
coffee contains four times the amount of cancer-fighting anti-oxidants
as green tea.
Of course, most of these studies do not take into
account how the coffee is brewed, how fresh the beans, and so
on. Perhaps as these studies are refined we may discover, for
example, that drinking coffee that has been freshly roasted and
brewed is more beneficial than downing coffee that is terminally
stale or badly brewed. Certainly there is considerably more going
on chemically in fresh coffee than in stale. And we may learn
how much beneficial effects of coffee drinking are provoked by
caffeine and how much by other, less understood, chemical components
of coffee. But one thing is certain, if I were a nurse taking
part in the study noted earlier, and if I were drinking cheap
office service coffee, I would be much, much more prone to suicide
than if I were drinking, say, a freshly roasted and brewed Ethiopia
Yirgacheffe.