It is the aromatic pick-me-up that millions of us rely on to get going in the morning. But some professions love coffee and tea more than others, a new survey has found. Journalists, teachers, police officers, plumbers and trade workers are the professions that drink the most coffee, the report claims. They were found to [...]

Sunday Times 2

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It is the aromatic pick-me-up that millions of us rely on to get going in the morning.

But some professions love coffee and tea more than others, a new survey has found.

Experts are fiercely divided on whether drinking coffee is good or bad for your health (AFP)

Journalists, teachers, police officers, plumbers and trade workers are the professions that drink the most coffee, the report claims.

They were found to sink four to five or more cups of the brown stuff every day.

The list of the top ten professions for coffee drinking continued with the nurses and medical staff, company executives and telesales workers who drink, on average, three to four cups a day.

They were followed by IT technical support and retail staff, who were found to be knocking back two to three cups a day.

Drivers were the last on the list, sinking one to two cups daily.

Experts are fiercely divided on whether drinking coffee is good or bad for your health.

According to NHS Choices, drinking more than four cups of coffee a day may increase your blood pressure, and can lead to dehydration if it’s your only source of fluid.

Previous studies have also linked higher caffeine intake with diabetes, coronary heart disease and stroke.

However other research has found that drinking moderate amounts of coffee (around four cups a day) reduced the risk of heart failure, possibly because of the antioxidants – compounds that work to lower inflammation in the body – that they contain.

Other reports have suggested the familiar buzz doesn’t so much as give us a lift, but fights the caffeine withdrawal symptoms – fatigue, mental fogginess and a dull headache – that have kicked in since our last cup.

Indeed, experts suggest that this morning ritual is actually a sign of mass drug dependency.

‘People who consume caffeine regularly will become dependent on it – if you take caffeine away from them, they will function below par,’ says Peter Rogers, professor of biological psychology at Bristol University and a leading expert on caffeine.

‘They just don’t function normally without the drug on board. If it’s your first tea or coffee of the day, it gets you back to normal, but beyond that you don’t get much more of a kick.’

© Daily Mail, London

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