Generally speaking, studies like these that utilize dietary recall to determine consumption can be prone to recall bias – people don't always accurately remember what and how much they consume. Additionally, in this scenario there hasn't been a clear determination of the total dose of caffeine consumed. Coffee from different manufacturers and roasts contains different amounts of caffeine, so a better study design would have tried to determine the total ingested caffeine dose rather than the amount of total products consumed.
All studies on human health should include female subjects and analyze results by gender. Lumping male and female data together obscures any potential sex or gender differences. Any future research should make sure to fully consider sex and gender as an experimental variable. In addition, studying essentially only a White population limits the role that race and ethnicity may play.
And, nearly 35% of the individuals were on some sort of drug therapy to limit ectopy (antiarrhythmic drugs). It can make it difficult to see small differences in arrhythmia (an abnormal heart rhythm) burden when patients are on drug therapy. Including a broader demographic not on drug therapy to limit arrhythmias and obtaining caffeine doses would provide more robust data and potentially reveal more disparities between consumption profiles.
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Answers to your questions on timely topics in cardiac care to help make sense of research reports in the media. The series includes questions on your heart and the effect of medications, exercise, diet, and hormones.