- Coffee Science Information Centre - Answers to questions about the effects of coffee on health, provided by the Institute for Scientific Information on Coffee.
- Coffee Science Source - Presents information on coffee, caffeine and health, reviewed by medical experts, from science journals and industry reports for journalists, health care professionals and coffee consumers.
- Ill Effects of Caffeine and How to Quit Coffee - Information about symptoms of caffeine addiction, calculating daily intake, withdrawal symptons, and quitting gradually.
- Institute for Coffee Studies - Division of the Vanderbilt University Medical Center that investigates the chemical nature of coffee, identifies potential therapeutic uses, and disseminates findings to the public. Includes summaries of research.
- New Scientist: Coffee Drinkers Have Lower Diabetes Risk - In a Dutch population, drinkers of seven or more cups of coffee a day were half as likely to develop type 2 diabetes. Journal reference: Lancet (vol 360, p 1477).
- The Coffee Review - Reference - Browse hundreds of pages of informative coffee materials adapted from Kenneth Davids' books. Includes a section on coffee and health.
Media publications
- Annals.org: Coffee Drinkers at Lower Risk for Type 2 Diabetes - In a United States population, people who drank more coffee were less likely to develop type 2 diabetes mellitus. Annals of Internal Medicine. (Published 2004.01.06)
- JAMA: Association of Coffee and Caffeine Intake With the Risk of Parkinson Disease - Higher coffee and caffeine intake is associated with a lower incidence of Parkinson Disease in a study of Japanese-American men. Published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. (Published 2000.05.24)
- JAMA: Coffee Consumption and Risk of Type 2 Diabetes - A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association reports an association between coffee consumption and a reduced risk of diabetes in a Finnish population. (Published 2004.03.10)
- JAMA: Coffee Consumption and Symptomatic Gallstone Disease in Men - In a study of men in the United States, coffee consumption may have helped to prevent symptomatic gallstone disease. Published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, (Published 1999.06.09)