health & wellbeing
Ask Dr Mark
YOUR QUESTIONS / HEARING / HERBAL SUPPLEMENTS
Our GP on the effects of too much coffee, reasons for high blood pressure, and cutting the risk of blood clots on long-haul flights
illustration DIONNE KITCHING
Q I drink two to three cups of strong ground coffee every day but a couple of friends in our bridge group have given it up on health grounds and advised me to do the same. I’d miss it terribly. What are the risks?
a I am not sure why, but coffee does seem to have a reputation for not being good for you. In fact, if anything, the opposite probably applies, based on the latest research.
Moderate coffee consumption – up to three to four cups of average strength brews – is associated with lots of benefits ranging from better endurance and stamina during physical exercise to a reduced risk of heart attack, stroke and even some cancers. One caveat: all these benefits are based on studies looking for differences between coffee drinkers and their non-coffee drinking peers. The research doesn’t prove that coffee is responsible for the apparent health benefits, and it may well be something else about regular consumers that explains the difference. However, it does at least suggest that coffee is likely to be good for you, rather than harmful. And it tastes good – at least to me.