Trends in Coffee and Tea Consumption during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
6. Limitations
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Strategy | Descriptors Used |
---|---|
# 1 | (diet*[tiab]) OR (feeding*[tiab])) OR (habit*[tiab]) OR (dietary lifestyle*[tiab]) OR (drinking habit*[tiab]) OR (beverage*[tiab]) OR (dietary habit*[tiab]) OR (dietary [tiab]) OR (dietary pattern*[tiab]) OR (dietary behavior*[tiab]) OR (food*[tiab]) OR (food habit*[tiab]) OR (eating habit*[tiab]) OR (coffee[tiab]) OR (tea[tiab]) |
# 2 | (change*[tiab]) OR (modification*[tiab]) OR (alteration*[tiab]) (different*[tiab]) OR (difference*[tiab]) |
# 3 | (SARS-CoV 2[tiab]) OR (COVID 19[tiab]) OR (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2[tiab]) |
# 4 | (Review) or (systematic review) or (narrative review) or (meta-analysis) |
# 5 | #1 AND #2 AND #3 NOT #4 |
Authors, Year [Ref.] | Diet Exposure | Diet Assessment Tool | Design | n | Sex | Age | Setting | Country | Results | Summary of Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bin Zarah A et al., 2020 [10] | Coffee, Tea | Questionnaire | Cross-sectional | 3133 | 19.8%M 79.4% F | 18+ years | Community | America (USA) | About 10% declared a reduction in frequency of consumption, whereas 31.1% an increase. | Participants reported a higher consumption of coffee and tea drinks. |
Husain W et al., 2020 [11] | Coffee, Tea | 415 | 31.3%M 68.7%F | 18+ years | Asia (Kuwait) | 1–2 cups/day of American coffee: 41.4% (before) vs. 33% (during) 3–4 cups/day of American coffee: 8.7% (before) vs. 5.5% (during) 1–2 cups/day of arabic coffee: 15.4% (before) vs. 15.5% (during) 5–6 cups/day of arabic coffee: 10.6% (before) vs. 7.7% (during) 1–2 cups/day of tea: 31.6% (before) vs. 33% (during) 5–6 cups/day of tea: 1.7% (before) vs. 2.9% (during) | Decreased consumption of American and Arabic coffee during the confinement, versus increase in tea consumption. | |||
Błaszczyk-Bębenek E et al., 2020 [12] | Coffee, Tea | 312 | 35.9%M 64.1%F | 18+ years | Europe (Poland) | Hot beverage consumption frequencies: 1–3 times/month: 3.2% (before) vs. 3.5% (during) Once a week: 1.3% (before) vs. 1.6% (during) A few times a week: 5.1% (before) vs. 7.1% (during) Once a day: 16.0% (before) vs. 16.3 (during) | Hot beverages such as black coffee, herbal, or fruit tea were chosen most frequently by respondents during the confinement. | |||
Grabia M et al., 2020 [13] | Coffee | 124 | 17%M 83%F | 17–45 years | Europe (Poland) | 30% reported an increase in frequency of coffee consumption while 13% reported a reduction. | Increased coffee consumption during the confinement. | |||
Sánchez-Sánchez E et al., 2020 [14] | Coffee, Tea | 1073 | 27.2%M 72.8%F | 16+ years | Europe (Spain) | Frequency of coffee or tea consumption: 7.89% (before) vs. 6.48% (during) | Decreased coffee or tea consumption during the confinement. | |||
Đogaš Z et al., 2020 [15] | Coffee | 3027 | 20.3%M 79.7%F | 18+ years | Europe (Croatia) | Frequency of coffee consumption (cups/day): All participants: 2.1 ± 1.0 (before) vs. 2.1 ± 1.1 (during) Males: 2.4 ± 1.2 (before) vs. 2.0 ± 1.2 (during) Females: 2.1 ± 1.0 (before) vs. 2.1 ± 1.1 (during) | Croatian males drank fewer cups of coffee during confinement. | |||
Di Renzo L et al., 2020 [16] | Coffee, Tea | 3533 | 23.9%M 76.1%F | 12–86 years | Europe (Italy) | Hot beverage consumption frequency increased by more than 20% during confinement. | Greater than 20% increase in the consumption of hot drinks | |||
Luo Y et al., 2021 [17] | Coffee, Tea | 2272 | 18.3%M 83.4%F | 18+ years | Asia (China) | Coffee, tea, and water consumption increased by 29.3%. | Hot beverage consumption increased during confinement. | |||
Skotnicka M et al., 2021 [18] | Coffee, Tea | 1071 | 43.6%M 56.4%F | 18+ years | Europe (Poland, Austria, UK) | Frequency of coffee consumption (cups/day): Poland: 76.90% (before) vs. 76.17% (during) Austria: 62.61% (before) vs. 62.32% (during) UK: 54.34% (before) vs. 49.84% (during) Frequency of tea consumption (cups/day): Poland: 57.74% (before) vs. 60.93% (during) Austria: 54.11% (before) vs. 58.36% (during) UK: 64.31% (before) vs. 74.59% (during) | More frequent consumption of tea and less frequent consumption of coffee during confinement. | |||
Celorio-Sardà R et al., 2021 [19] | Coffee, Tea | 321 | 20.2%M 79.8%F | 18+ years | Europe (Spain) | There was a decrease in coffee and tea consumption during confinement reported by 56.7% of the study sample. | Decreased coffee and tea consumption during confinement. | |||
Izzo L et al., 2021 [20] | Coffee | 1519 | 28.4%M 71.6%F | 0+ years | Europe (Italy) | Coffee consumption increased for 64.8% of participants. | Increased coffee consumption during confinement. | |||
Mitchell E.S. et al., 2021 [21] | Coffee | 381,564 | 16.6%M 83.4%F | 18+ | America (USA) | Caffeinated beverages such as tea and coffee decreased in the proportion of users aged 18–35 years (−2.3%), but only marginally decreased in users aged 35 years and older. | Decreased tea and coffee consumption during confinement. | |||
Deschasaux-Tanguy M et al., 2021 [22] | Coffee, Tea | 37,252 | 47.7%M 52.3%F | 18+ years | Europe (France) | Frequency of tea consumption during confinement: Increased for 19.5%, for decreased 4.3%. Frequency of coffee consumption during confinement: Increased for 13.5%, decreased for 8.4% | Increased coffee and tea consumption during confinement. |
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Castellana, F.; De Nucci, S.; De Pergola, G.; Di Chito, M.; Lisco, G.; Triggiani, V.; Sardone, R.; Zupo, R. Trends in Coffee and Tea Consumption during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Foods 2021, 10, 2458. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10102458
Castellana F, De Nucci S, De Pergola G, Di Chito M, Lisco G, Triggiani V, Sardone R, Zupo R. Trends in Coffee and Tea Consumption during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Foods. 2021; 10(10):2458. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10102458
Chicago/Turabian StyleCastellana, Fabio, Sara De Nucci, Giovanni De Pergola, Martina Di Chito, Giuseppe Lisco, Vincenzo Triggiani, Rodolfo Sardone, and Roberta Zupo. 2021. "Trends in Coffee and Tea Consumption during the COVID-19 Pandemic" Foods 10, no. 10: 2458. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10102458
APA StyleCastellana, F., De Nucci, S., De Pergola, G., Di Chito, M., Lisco, G., Triggiani, V., Sardone, R., & Zupo, R. (2021). Trends in Coffee and Tea Consumption during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Foods, 10(10), 2458. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10102458