Send us Fan Mail
Visit my website
Bold claims make great headlines; clear evidence makes better habits. We take a hard look at the widely shared study suggesting two to three cups of coffee cut dementia risk by 20 percent and unpack what those numbers really mean for your brain and your daily routine.
First, we break down the Harvard JAMA research: massive cohorts of nurses and physicians, decades of follow-up, and self-reported diet data that carry real strengths and built-in limits. We explore why observational studies can’t prove causation, how confounders like sleep, exercise, and income can bend results, and why tea showing similar benefits while decaf shows none points to caffeine yet refuses a tidy explanation. Then we translate relative risk into absolute terms to show how a big percentage drop can still be a small difference in real life, and we discuss the publication bias that comes from testing many hypotheses and promoting only the eye-catching hits.
Next, we turn to trials where the science gets sharper. The CRAVE study randomized coffee days in healthy adults with continuous heart monitoring and found no rise in atrial abnormalities that lead to atrial fibrillation, though there was a bump in benign PVCs. For those with a history of AF, the DCAF trial offers a surprise: participants who kept drinking coffee had almost half the recurrence rate compared with those who quit, suggesting caffeine didn’t worsen outcomes and might even help. The message for most people is reassuring—coffee isn’t the arrhythmia trigger it’s often made out to be.
Our bottom line is practical and personal. If coffee fits your life and doesn’t wreck your sleep, enjoy one or two cups without expecting miracles. Protect your rest first, because sleep debt is a far clearer risk to cognition than a second espresso is a remedy. Stay curious, ask how a study was designed, and look for consistent results across methods before changing routines. If you learned something helpful, tap follow, share this episode with a friend who loves their morning brew, and leave a quick review to help others find the show.