Amount of Caffeine on the Lable?

    • Gold Top Dog

    Amount of Caffeine on the Lable?

     There is a movement afoot to require the purveyors of coffee to now disclose the amount of caffeine in their products along with a health warning that caffeine is addictive and it's side effects. According to Health Canada 400mg is the maximum recommended intake of caffeine/day. A tall grande at Starbucks contains 330mg. So how much caffeine are you consuming? Are you addicted? Ever had a caffeine headache? Would you like to know the amount of caffeine in that cup of coffe you are buying?

    • Gold Top Dog

    denise m

     There is a movement afoot to require the purveyors of coffee to now disclose the amount of caffeine in their products along with a health warning that caffeine is addictive and it's side effects. According to Health Canada 400mg is the maximum recommended intake of caffeine/day. A tall grande at Starbucks contains 330mg. So how much caffeine are you consuming? Are you addicted? Ever had a caffeine headache? Would you like to know the amount of caffeine in that cup of coffe you are buying?

     

    This one made me laugh!!!  Asking a former trucker to tell you how much caffeine they've consumed is like asking an alcoholic if they know how many beers they had last night.  The answer is always the same - "a couple".  I have no idea how much caffeine I have consumed, but I know it used to be a whole lot more than I take in now.  I don't know how much good it did me, but I never fell asleep at the wheel (in fact, drove over 1 million safe miles) but I sure had a lot of brown stains on my lap.  For some reason, I spilled a lot of it, mostly on I-80 in Pennsylvania.

    • Gold Top Dog

    boy talk about nanny gov't. LOL. I personally don't care how much it has...just so long as there IS some! I am I'd suppose, addicted to caffeine and yet I managed to not drink any for nine month stretches when I was preggers and cut down when my stomach acts up.

    Lordy. lol.

    • Gold Top Dog

    As a young woman (very early 20's) I worked in a factory and the morning crew would each buy me a cup of coffee, line them up on my 'window' to my little "cabin" in the production area where I worked and I'd drink ALL of them (8 cups) before they got cold when I first got in.  THAT was just morning when I was drinking coffee before I switched to iced tea or coke after noon!

    I wasn't feeling too hot, went to the doctor and asked why I had headaches and was shakey all the time and ... (*rolling eyes* I still don't get it why *I* hadn't figgered it out).

    Quit 'cold turkey' -- and caffeine headache?  Oh lordy. 

    Since?  I'm hyper sensitive to caffeine.  I LOVE coffee, truly do.  (black please -- none of that cream/sugar junk)  But I drink de-caf even in the morning and NO MORE coke after 3:00 p.m.

    and at night?  I get half a cup of decaf with the cup filled up with hot water.  That's ALL.  Even green tea will wire me silly. 

    I knew 12 years ago when Starbucks and coffee bars became all the 'thang' -- this was coming.  It's a personal decision, but one that is intelligent if you value your stomach and nerves and heart as you get older.  We all just haven't gotten it thru our heads yet that what we may LIKE may not always be beneficial to us.  And is what we want and what we like always *that* important?  personal decision

    • Gold Top Dog

    I don't really worry about it  because I don't think I drink that much anyway.  I usually have one cup of coffee in the a.m., sometimes a second one but not always. I might have some iced  tea later but the sodas I drink are non-caffeinated like 7-UP, Squirt, etc. If I don't have a cup in the a.m. for some reason, the only thing that happens is that I get a little sleepier a little earlier than usual ... no headaches.

    Joyce

    • Bronze

    I've recently given up caffeine almost totally.  I can't say I've noticed any big difference, but then I didn't drink a ton of it.

    I really do think we're taking the labeling stuff too far.  There's so much info on labels now I can barely read them, even with my glasses on. Stick out tongue  And while the general public might not know exactly how much caffeine is in a large cup of coffee, I think just about everybody realizes it's a good "dose".

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    Myra

     And while the general public might not know exactly how much caffeine is in a large cup of coffee, I think just about everybody realizes it's a good "dose".

    Absolutely true ... and I really don't think the people that head off to Starbucks every a.m. for a "Tall Grande Whatever" are going to change their routine because the label tells them they're getting three days worth of caffeine in one cup.

    Joyce

    • Gold Top Dog

    calliecritturs
    And is what we want and what we like always *that* important?  personal decision

    Yes. IMO the government has NO business in my stomach.

    My doctor, my family might have business there, MAYBE...the GOVERNMENT? no. Butt, out....sez I.

    • Gold Top Dog

    fuzzy_dogs_mom

    Absolutely true ... and I really don't think the people that head off to Starbucks every a.m. for a "Tall Grande Whatever" are going to change their routine because the label tells them they're getting three days worth of caffeine in one cup.

    Joyce

    I think it does have the potential of making a difference. Although most people realize they are getting a good 'dose' of caffeine in their tall grande, I wonder how many are aware of the health issues associated with large amounts of caffeine. Before McDonalds started listing the nutritional information on their food everybody knew it was fattening. Once the information was available a lot of people opted for the more nutritional options. Geeze, who knew the salad dressing was so calorie packed? For sure most people are not going to give up their coffee but if a Dunkin' Donut coffee has a way less caffeine than Starbucks I could see people switching or Starbucks offering a reduced caffeine product. Maybe consumers will pass on that 2nd or 3rd cup O'Joe. This is what I found: 

    The Health Effects of Caffeine

    It is difficult to link precise intake levels of caffeine to specific health effects because tolerance to caffeine differs widely from person to person. For healthy adults, a small amount of caffeine may have positive effects, such as increased alertness or ability to concentrate. However, some people are more sensitive to caffeine. For them, a small amount could cause insomnia, headaches, irritability and nervousness.

    There have been many studies over the years dealing with caffeine and human health. These studies have looked at the potential adverse effects of caffeine in such areas as:

    • general toxicity (e.g., muscle tremors, nausea, irritability);
    • cardiovascular effects (e.g., heart rate, cholesterol, blood pressure);
    • effects on calcium balance and bone health (e.g., bone density, risk of fractures);
    • behavioural effects in both adults and children (e.g., anxiety, mood changes, attentiveness);
    • potential links to cancer; and
    • effects on reproduction (e.g., male and female fertility, birth weight)

    Health Canada scientists recently reviewed these studies and found that:

    • The general population of healthy adults is not at risk for potential adverse effects from caffeine if they limit their caffeine intake to 400mg per day;
    • People who get an adequate daily amount of calcium have greater protection against the possible adverse effects of caffeine on bone health. For most people, choosing foods according to Canada's Food Guide to Healthy Eating can provide the calcium needed for good health;
    • Compared to the general adult population, children are at increased risk for possible behavioural effects from caffeine; and
    • Women of childbearing age are at increased risk of possible reproductive effects.

    These conclusions prompted Health Canada to establish new recommendations on maximum daily caffeine intakes for the groups that may be at higher risk.

    • Gold Top Dog

    I would want to know.  I dont even drink coffee!  But, it would still be MY decision to drink it, but you couldn't say you weren't aware of what you were doing.  I'm all in favor of knowing what I'm consuming, whether it be good or bad.

    • Gold Top Dog

    denise m
    It is difficult to link precise intake levels of caffeine to specific health effects because tolerance to caffeine differs widely from person to person. For healthy adults, a small amount of caffeine may have positive effects, such as increased alertness or ability to concentrate. However, some people are more sensitive to caffeine. For them, a small amount could cause insomnia, headaches, irritability and nervousness

    So the above means "even tho it's just as likely as NOT that you will have problems...we want to let you know about the problems you might have and thus scare you a bit..."

    This is why kids are not allowed to bring peanut butter sandwiches to school in some places, either....gawd.

    Give....

    me...

    a....

    break...

    lol.

     

    • Gold Top Dog

    Cafeine is a stimulate, nicotine is a stimulant ... we humans tend to like our 'vices' and coffee in recent years has stepped in to that role as well (I think in definance of some who have stopped smoking).  We've become such a driven society that cafeine is just one more thing that many folks use to drive themselves and "enjoy it".  They fly past the "I need this to get started" with the "WANT my coffee".

    Gina, I completely agree with you -- but sometimes I think we *ask* for government intervention because we refuse to police ourselves and then suddenly there's a health crisis and the government feels pressured to nanny all of us.

    I'm just one of those who stops short in this life when I suddenly discover a need for a thing I can't easily say no to.  And dang .. when it's chocolate ... that really sucks.  *sigh*

    • Gold Top Dog

    Okay I had to post this, reading the "red ink" on caffeine strongly reminded me of this, right down to lists of side effects supported by scientific research.

    PENN/TELLER

    This is why gov't or otherwise "entity" supported commentary on my personal eating or drinking habits make me smirk. Soylent Green cannot be far off these days.

    • Gold Top Dog

    calliecritturs
    We've become such a driven society that cafeine is just one more thing that many folks use to drive themselves and "enjoy it

     

    People have always loved coffee....cowboys brewed it on the open range, soliders brewed in wartime, Ward Cleaver had some every morning, for heavenssake. It's part of the already somewhat limited and infant "culture" of this country.

    IMO everything is bad on some level and in some quantity. Enough plain water will and has killed human beings...I'd hazard to say the water issuing forth from many TAPS in this country, and others...is more harmful long term than coffee...and more people imbibe that, don't they? So due to those fears we have many co's making a lot of $$ of of the same stuff, but in a nice "clean" bottle, LOL.

    I think P & T were on to something. I just wish I had thought of bottling tap water and selling it!

    • Gold Top Dog

     I don't take in that much caffeine in an average day....a cup or two of tea or coffee, maybe, the occasional diet coke.  However, if I wanted more I'd have more and I don't like the idea of the government pointing out our caffeine intake.  For one thing, I find it almost patronising - "you do KNOW there is caffeine in this, right?" - and for another, if everyone started drinking under the recommended intake tomorrow, the economy would shut down (even more than it already has).  Every single technology/computer programming company in the world would become a desert wasteland of geeks snoring at their desks. 

    And as a point of interest, they want people to know the side effects, including headaches?  I wonder if they'll also put on the label that one side effect of caffeine is that it CURES certain types of headache.