Study Finds Coffee May “Cancel Out” the Mortality Risks of Sitting for Long Hours Each Day
Among adults sitting more than 6 hours a day, coffee drinkers had ~23% lower all-cause death risk than non-coffee drinkers.
A recent National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) analysis suggests something surprising: coffee may “cancel out” the increased mortality risk seen in sedentary individuals that sit for long periods of time.
Researchers analyzed 10,639 U.S. adults (NHANES 2007–2018) with mortality follow-up through Dec 31, 2019 (up to 13 years). During follow-up, there were 945 deaths, including 284 cardiovascular deaths. They adjusted for major confounders—including age, sex, race/ethnicity, education, income, BMI and waist circumference, smoking, alcohol use, diet quality, hypertension, cholesterol, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, cancer history, and physical activity.
As expected, sitting was harmful:
Sitting more than 8 hours/day was linked to a 46% higher all-cause mortality risk and 79% higher cardiovascular mortality risk, compared with sitting less than 4 hours/day.
Independent of sitting time, higher coffee intake was associated with lower mortality risk overall:
Compared with non-coffee consumers, the highest coffee intake group had 33% lower all-cause mortality and 54% lower cardiovascular mortality.
But the most important finding came from the joint analysis: prolonged sitting showed a clear mortality penalty in non–coffee drinkers, while that signal was markedly blunted in coffee drinkers:
Among adults sitting more than 6 hours/day, coffee drinkers had ~23% lower all-cause death hazard than non-coffee drinkers, and the excess mortality was statistically significant only in the non-coffee group (HR 1.58; 95% CI 1.25–1.99).
This is consistent with coffee “canceling out” much of the sedentary death penalty.
This has biological plausibility: prolonged, uninterrupted sitting appears to impair glucose metabolism and increase inflammatory signaling (including higher pro-inflammatory markers and CRP), while coffee contains >1,000 bioactive compounds—including caffeine and polyphenols—with antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects that may improve insulin resistance and dampen inflammation.
Your daily coffee may be doing more than boosting focus—it may be quietly helping protect your lifespan in a sedentary world. But movement is still essential, and more studies are needed to confirm whether coffee truly offsets sitting-related harm.
Epidemiologist and Foundation Administrator, McCullough Foundation
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I've had to go to the ER twice in my life because of drinking coffee ! Why is it no one talks about the NEGATIVE and dangerous side effects of coffee , its NOT all positive !
I drink it all day...with a few espressos thrown in...l love it...I move a fast and constantly, though, with 23 rescue animals to care for. I couldn't do it without coffee, a bit of pure tobacco and my red light mat...and I can fall asleep within a half hour of my last cup.
But, I don't think it's for everyone...just have to tune into your body...
Amazing that I'm doing anything right considering that I'm in constant flight or fight mode with this mass extinction event that we are facing...
Thank you for your tireless work on our behalf, Nicolas...you're a tireless, brilliant and generous man...we know how much you care...
Just Staying Alive is an Act of Defiance... the Diva