Take your tea with a reduced chance of dying

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Pour yourself a big cuppa everyone, as drinking black tea could lower your chance of dying, say US researchers. The team used data from the UK Biobank to compare people's tea drinking habits with their risk of dying from any cause. They said people who reported drinking two or more cups of black tea had a 9-13% lower risk of dying. The researchers said this association was seen regardless of whether people also drank coffee, added milk or sugar to their tea, what temperature they drank it at, or genetic variants related to caffeine metabolism.

News release

From: American College of Physicians

Drinking black tea may be associated with lower mortality risk

A prospective cohort study found that drinking black tea may be associated with a moderately lower mortality risk. The risk was lowest among persons drinking two or more cups of tea per day. The findings are published in Annals of Internal Medicine.

Tea is one of the most consumed beverages worldwide. Previous research has suggested an association between tea consumptions and lower mortality risk in populations where green tea is the most common type of tea. In contrast, published studies in populations where black tea drinking is more common are limited with inconsistent findings.

Researchers from the National Institutes of Health conducted a study to evaluate the associations of tea consumption with all-cause and cause-specific mortality using data from the U.K. Biobank, where black tea drinking is common.

They also assessed whether the associations differ by use of common tea additives (milk and sugar), tea temperature, and genetic variants affecting the rate at which people metabolize caffeine.

The U.K. Biobank includes data on a half a million men and women, aged 40 to 69 years, who completed a baseline questionnaire between 2006 and 2010.

Of those, 85 percent reported regularly drinking tea and of them, 89 percent reported drinking black tea.

Relative to tea nondrinkers, participants who reported drinking 2 or more cups each day had 9 to 13 percent lower risk for mortality.

The associations were observed regardless of whether participants also drank coffee, added milk or sugar to their tea, their preferred tea temperature, or genetic variants related to caffeine metabolism.

According to the authors, their findings suggest that tea, even at higher levels of intake, can be part of a healthy diet.

Journal/
conference:
Annals of Internal Medicine
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: National Institutes of Health, USA
Funder: By the NIH National Cancer Institute Intramural Research Program, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, NIH, Department of Health and Human Services.
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