Latest posts
-
ScienceDaily Reports Moderate Coffee and Tea Intake Linked to 35% Lower Dementia Risk

ScienceDaily Highlights New Analysis Linking Coffee and Tea to Reduced Dementia Risk A major caffeine science storyline broke this week with a ScienceDaily report covering newly synthesized research on dementia prevention. According to ScienceDaily’s May 13 article, moderate daily coffee and tea intake may lower dementia risk by as much as 35% based on a
-
EatingWell Maps Blood Pressure Effects of Quitting Caffeine as Pregnancy Caffeine Guidance Sharpens

EatingWell Examines What Happens to Blood Pressure When Caffeine Consumption Stops Caffeine and health coverage this week led with an EatingWell article published May 12 detailing what happens to blood pressure when caffeine consumers quit. According to EatingWell’s May 12 article, high caffeine intake may cause repeated blood pressure spikes leading to long-term heart-health risks.
-
Mass General Brigham JAMA Coffee Dementia Study Receives Renewed May Coverage

MindBodyGreen Spotlights JAMA Findings on Coffee and Long-Term Brain Health Caffeine and health coverage this week centered on a major February 2026 JAMA dementia study that continues to drive editorial attention three months after publication. According to MindBodyGreen’s May 11 article on the JAMA paper by Zhang and colleagues from Mass General Brigham and Harvard,
-
Times of India and AOL Push Caffeine Consumers to Reconsider Daily Caffeine Routines
Times of India Profiles Simple Daily Habits That May Reduce Caffeine Dependence Caffeine consumer behavior coverage took a notable wellness-focused turn this week with new editorial questioning whether daily caffeine routines are still necessary. According to the Times of India’s May 10 article on simple daily habits, focus and energy can often be improved without
-
England Advances Energy Drink Ban for Under-16s as Nigerian Doctors Link Energy Drinks to Kidney Disease

UK Government Confirms Plan to Ban Energy Drink Sales to Under-16s in England The most significant caffeine regulation development this week came from England, where the UK government has formally advanced its plan to ban energy drink sales to children under 16. According to MSN coverage from May 10, the UK Government’s plans would prohibit
-
PLOS One Study Finds Caffeine No Better Than Placebo for Mental Fatigue in Adult Caffeine Consumers

Western University Researchers Report Surprising Caffeine Mental Fatigue Findings A new caffeine science study published April 30 in PLOS One and covered by News-Medical.Net on May 10 has produced an unexpected result that is already generating widespread coverage across the caffeine industry. According to the study titled “Differential effects of caffeine, acute aerobic exercise, and
-
Caffeine Restores Sleep-Deprivation Memory Loss as Researchers Study Caffeine-Melatonin Combinations

NUS Medicine Findings Suggest Caffeine Selectively Repairs Memory Circuits Workplace productivity researchers have been quick to highlight the practical implications of new caffeine and cognitive performance research from Singapore. According to MindBodyGreen’s May 7 coverage of the NUS Medicine study, sleep deprivation specifically disrupts neural circuits involved in social memory — the ability to recognize
-
EatingWell Reports Coffee’s Anti-Inflammatory Benefits as Caffeine Linked to Lower Multiple Sclerosis Odds

EatingWell Coverage of Nature Communications Study Highlights Anti-Inflammatory Pathways A new wave of caffeine and health reporting this week centers on coffee’s emerging anti-inflammatory profile. According to EatingWell’s May 7 article covering the Nature Communications coffee gut-brain immunity study, researchers observed shifts in metabolites associated with anti-inflammatory effects in coffee drinkers. According to the same
-
Caffeine Consumers Question the Morning Coffee Routine as Fox News Warns of Roller-Coaster Energy

Fox News Reports Morning Coffee May Be Worsening Daytime Fatigue A new wave of consumer-facing caffeine coverage is questioning a longstanding cultural assumption: that morning coffee is the most reliable path to daytime energy. According to Fox News reporting from May 8, experts warned that morning coffee could be making caffeine consumers more tired rather
-
Workplace Caffeine Studies Confirm Half the Cognitive Failures and Fewer Accidents With Precise Dosing

Caffeine at Work Study Links Caffeine to Half the Cognitive Failures A landmark caffeine and productivity body of evidence is gaining renewed attention this week as workplace performance becomes a defining concern of the 2026 economy. According to the Caffeine at Work study published by PubMed-indexed researchers, those who consumed higher levels of caffeine reported