Bone Health

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Split-image illustration of older women: tea drinker with strong bones on left, high coffee consumer with weaker bones on right, highlighting study findings.
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Tea may strengthen bones in older women while very high coffee intake is linked to lower density

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A 10-year study of nearly 10,000 women aged 65 and older found that regular tea drinking was linked to slightly higher bone mineral density, a key marker of osteoporosis risk. Moderate coffee intake showed no overall harm, but consuming more than five cups a day was associated with lower bone density, particularly among women who reported higher lifetime alcohol use, according to researchers from Flinders University.

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