Coffee drinkers have lower risk of death: NIH study
May 18, 2012
Older adults who drank coffee — caffeinated or decaffeinated — had a lower risk of death overall than others who did not drink coffee, according a study by researchers from the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health, and AARP.
Coffee drinkers were less likely to die from heart disease, respiratory disease, stroke, injuries and accidents, diabetes, and infections, although the association was not seen for cancer.
These results from a large study of older adults were observed after adjustment for the effects of other risk factors on mortality, such as smoking and alcohol consumption.
Researchers caution, however, that they can’t be sure whether these associations mean that drinking coffee actually makes people live longer.
Neal Freedman, Ph.D., Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, NCI, and his colleagues examined the association between coffee drinking and risk of death in 400,000 U.S. men and women ages 50 to 71 who participated in the NIH-AARP Diet and Health Study. Information about coffee intake was collected once by questionnaire at study entry in 1995-1996. The participants were followed until the date they died or Dec. 31, 2008, whichever came first.
The researchers found that the association between coffee and reduction in risk of death increased with the amount of coffee consumed. Relative to men and women who did not drink coffee, those who consumed three or more cups of coffee per day had approximately a 10 percent lower risk of death. Coffee drinking was not associated with cancer mortality among women, but there was a slight and only marginally statistically significant association of heavier coffee intake with increased risk of cancer death among men.
“Coffee is one of the most widely consumed beverages in America, but the association between coffee consumption and risk of death has been unclear. We found coffee consumption to be associated with lower risk of death overall, and of death from a number of different causes,” said Freedman. “Although we cannot infer a causal relationship between coffee drinking and lower risk of death, we believe these results do provide some reassurance that coffee drinking does not adversely affect health.”
The investigators caution that coffee intake was assessed by self-report at a single time point and therefore might not reflect long-term patterns of intake. Also, information was not available on how the coffee was prepared (espresso, boiled, filtered, etc.); the researchers consider it possible that preparation methods may affect the levels of any protective components in coffee.
“The mechanism by which coffee protects against risk of death — if indeed the finding reflects a causal relationship — is not clear, because coffee contains more than 1,000 compounds that might potentially affect health,” said Freedman. “The most studied compound is caffeine, although our findings were similar in those who reported the majority of their coffee intake to be caffeinated or decaffeinated.”
Ref.: Neal D. Freedman et al., Association of Coffee Drinking with Total and Cause-Specific Mortality, New England Journal of Medicine, 2012, DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1112010

Comments (22)
by mlohbihler
As a fan of coffee (black, no sugar), i hate to rain on this parade, but the study doesn’t actually say that coffee is good for you. Other similar studies were also careful not to confuse correlation with causation. An obvious reason for this study’s results is what the coffee drinkers are *not* otherwise drinking. Typical substitutes are pop (soda), fruit juice, iced tea, and any number of other sugar-laden beverages, which are known to cause many life-shortening health issues when consumed in excess. Coffee isn’t necessarily good for you, it’s just better than most alternatives.
A better study for determining whether coffee is actually good or bad would be to compare coffee drinkers against strictly water drinkers, because I would not expect that the non-coffee drinkers in this study were only drinking water.
by Editor
mlohbihler: good points. I think we need to put the “not to confuse correlation with causation” warning on medical-related research posts. This is also another example of why we need personalized medicine.
by GatorALLin
…ok, so just tell us…. did starbucks sponsor this research… (grin).
by George
Check out a more extensive discussion linking coffee drinking to health – including cancer from the member supported Life Extension Foundation: http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2012/jan2012_Discovering-Coffees-Unique-Health-Benefits_01.htm?source=search&key=coffee
by Charlotte Avant
Wouldn’t a more significant age group have been 70 to 87, the normal longevitiy of Americans to measure if coffee drinkers die sooner than normal? Otherwise, studying an age group of 30 to 50 year olds would have similar statistical significance.
by trakk
BUT
Never ever drink coffee at night….it messes with our sleep. I learned it the hard way. And science supports this fact too.
Coffee and tea have caffeine in them which alerts the brain and prevents it from winding down to sleep.
by Jay
You can always tell a study is really scientific and thorough when they spend more time on explaining why the study may not actually tell us anything than on showing us what the study tells us.
by teddybear
I think the research of coffee falls into the personal medicine category.
The reason is as follows:
The compound coffee could be broken down into about1,000 compounds that could potentially effect health. This loops of effects, with 1,000 compounds of coffee interacting tremendously greater number of compounds of your body, is out of mass-product-research type.
There’s an average(say, positive effect of coffee on longevity), but the deviation for every person is wild, both in terms of quality and quantity.
In the future, your body, nutrition, etc will be quantified and the data should be transferred to your software. Thus, with computer software simulation, about this innumerable interaction of chemical compounds, the computer will list the positive/negative effect on many of your body parts, and your longevity.
I think there is the gap of paradigm shift between the current research and the claim of personal medicine.
Hope future development of overall technology will fill in the gap.
ps.
I drink 3-7 cups of coffee everyday. Sounds not bad, according to this research.
by Cybernettr
“Although we cannot infer a causal relationship between coffee drinking and lower risk of death, we believe these results do provide some reassurance that coffee drinking does not adversely affect health.”
In other words, coffee may not be quite as bad for you as previously thought, according to one preliminary study.
by Bob Vasquez
A couple of cups of coffee in the morning, a round of golf, a shower, lunch with coffee, a walk to the beach, then, a nap. This rest of you can do more research and let me know what you find.
by Keith Fuselier
Until proven otherwise, everyone’s risk of death is 100%.
by GatorALLin
…well I plan to live forever…..so far …so good….
by harmil22
For me coffee is a mild and enjoyable stimutant. Since developing a 6 cup a day habit I now take my beagle for a 4-5 mile walk (ah, the joys of retirement) after lunch every day rather than take a nap. If I hadn’t got into the coffee habit I suspect I would still be chosing the nap. The goal of my walk is a stop at Dutch Brothers for coffee a little over 2 miles from my house for some of the “really good stuff.” Hey, they even give my dog a few treats. Since I lost quite a bit of weight I suspect one possibility is that coffee drinkers may on average run at a bit higher metabolism and energy level that improves their health a little.
by L2k4FC
Drink up for tomorrow we die. ……Or do we?? Lol…it’s just coffee boys. Outside of having congenital heart issues it isn’t going to kill you. Maybe people who drink more coffee live longer because they contemplate, meditate and enjoy life while enjoying coffee?
by Maurice LeCroy
I’m getting younger just reading this!
by Bruce Wright
I’d have to read through the study (won’t have a chance to do so until next week at the earliest), but I have some concerns about whether this is measuring a cause or an effect – on its face the study looks like it has the potential for bias issues.
In my particular situation, I have an inherited congenital heart defect that causes heart rhythm abnormalities; my cardiologist does not want me consuming much (any) caffeine. I find decaf coffee to be practically undrinkable, so I don’t drink coffee even though I like it. Fortunately as long as my heart maintains its proper rhythm (which we’re controlling with drugs), my cardiac function is in about the 90th percentile, so I’m in reasonably good shape, and am probably not at a significantly elevated risk of mortality from heart failure.
However many people with heart problems (both congenital and otherwise) are not so lucky, and when they’re told by their cardiologist “No caffeine” will quit coffee, but will be subject to a significantly increased risk of mortality due to atherosclerosis or heart defects or injury. Unless the study controls for bias of this kind, it’s impossible to say whether the coffee drinking is actually *beneficial* or whether it’s simply more likely to be found amongst healthy individuals.
It does sound like it probably shows that coffee is at least not notably dangerous, at least as long as you don’t have rhythm abnormalities.
by matthew fuller
Suppose they did not control for persons with known problems drinking coffee, or many other known contaminates coffee may have, depending on how it is prepared and how it is made. If coffee still leads to life extension despite the control, this means that the average effect can overcome these small risks.
What we need to know is what is good about coffee? I doubt it is the caffeine, but so many studies have found a positive benefit there is likely a causative factor worth exploring.
by spikosauropod
peter g: “at five cups a day your putting yourself at risk of heart failure”
Science says no.
by peter g
at five cups a day your putting yourself at risk of heart failure
by LD
And mine, too :-)
by Giulio Prisco
And mine!
by Spikosauropod
Vindication for my 5 cup a day habit!