Guys who drink lots of coffee can revel in their habit, guilt-free. Coffee may ward off prostate cancer. A study is being unveiled that found higher coffee consumption, six cups a day or more, led to a lower instance of prostate cancer in men.
Why caffeine may be good
A new research has just been released from the Harvard School of Public Health that will comes as good news to coffee houses men addicted to caffeine, according to MSNBC. The men who drank lots of coffee had a much smaller chance of getting prostate cancer showing that excessive coffee might be good for health. There are still the same basic downsides though. CBS states that there were 48,000 guys in the study who were followed from 1986 to 2008. The number of men with prostate cancer was lowest among those with six or more cups.
Opposite outcomes from research done previously
There was a research done in the Harvard School of Public Health 30 years back. It was opposite of what this study said in its conclusions. The research in the other research showed that it was flawed though. Coffee habits of patients were reviewed by asking them. Patients reported more specifically on their coffee habits when they had cancer. Outcomes are very easily contaminated by “recall bias,” which is what it is known as. In the study that has just been unveiled, guys who drank six cups of coffee per day or more had 60 percent less of a chance of getting prostate cancer and a 20 percent less chance of developing the deadliest forms of the disease. Anybody who drank 3 or less cups a day had 30 percent less chance. The caffeine made no difference to the research.
More studies needed
The reason coffee could have an effect on prostate cancer is unknown, according to WebMD, however one of the leading theories is the presence of antioxidants. Several health benefits, such as low risk of heart disease and cancer, have been shown to correlate with dietary antioxidants. Other studies have shown that drinking coffee can decrease risks for Parkinson’s disease, gout and Type 2 diabetes. One in six men is affected by prostate cancer making it the most common cancer in men. prostate cancer causes over 30,000 fatalities a year.
Citations
MSNBC
msnbc.msn.com/id/43065205/ns/health-cancer/
CBS
cbsnews.com/8301-504763_162-20063692-10391704.html?tag=cbsnewsSectionContent.9
WebMD
webmd.com/prostate-cancer/news/20110517/coffee-may-lower-prostate-cancer-risk
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