• Do you know? Drinking tea reduces risk of death, study reveals

    Lifestyle
    Do you know? Drinking tea reduces risk of death, study reveals

    Researchers at the National Cancer Institute, a division of the National Institutes of Health in the United Kingdom, conducted the study, which switches the emphasis from earlier studies that mostly focused on green tea.


    Digital
    Desk: Do you choose hot tea over coffee? A recent study indicates benefits of
    the hot beverage, which is consumed often not just in India but also in many
    other nations around the world.



    In a thorough examination of the
    potential mortality advantages of drinking black tea, British researchers
    discovered that greater tea consumption is linked to a moderately decreased
    risk of death. According to data analysis, persons who drink two or three cups
    of tea each day have a 9% and 13% lower risk of dying than those who don't.




    Researchers
    at the National Cancer Institute, a division of the National Institutes of
    Health in the United Kingdom, conducted the study, which switches the emphasis
    from earlier studies that mostly focused on green tea.



    "According to research,
    those who drank two or more cups of tea daily had a 9% to 13% lower risk of
    passing away from any cause than those who did not. A decreased risk of death
    from cardiovascular disease, ischemic heart disease, and stroke was also linked
    to higher tea drinking "In a statement, NIH stated.



    While
    tea is extensively consumed worldwide, the study published in the journal
    Annals of Internal Medicine claims that in populations where black tea is
    primarily consumed, the link between tea drinking and mortality risk is still
    unclear.



    A total of 4,98,043 men and women
    between the ages of 40 and 69 took part in the study, and 89% of them admitted
    to drinking the black variety. Between 2006 and 2010, participants in the study
    were asked to complete a survey that was then followed up on for more than ten
    years. The participants were tracked for approximately 11 years, and data on
    deaths was collected from a linked database maintained by the UK National
    Health Service.




    "Regardless
    of genetic difference in caffeine metabolism, those who drank two or more cups
    of tea per day had a decreased mortality risk. These results imply that tea can
    be a part of a healthy diet even at higher levels of consumption "The
    study's conclusions.



    No matter the desired tea
    temperature, whether milk or sugar was added, or whether a person's genetic
    makeup affected how quickly they metabolised caffeine, the link was still
    present, according to the NIH.