A population-based study on safety and health of drinking Litsea coreana tea (hawk tea)
Han Zhang, Xiyu Pu, Haijun Huang, Qin Huang, Bao Yu, Weiguo Cao, Yong Zhang

TL;DR
A study in Chongqing found that drinking hawk tea, made from Litsea coreana, is safe and may help reduce the risk of high cholesterol.
Contribution
This is the first population-based study to investigate the safety and health effects of hawk tea consumption in humans.
Findings
Hawk tea consumption was not associated with reported health symptoms in users.
Heavy hawk tea drinkers had significantly lower odds of hyperlipidaemia compared to light drinkers.
The study found no detectable health risks from hawk tea consumption.
Abstract
A herbal tea of leaves and stems of Litsea coreana, named Hawk tea locally, has been traditionally consumed in some places in southwestern China. However, there is no human based evidence about the safety and health effects of drinking hawk tea. This study aims to illustrate possible healthy effects of consuming hawk tea in a population with a habit of drinking hawk tea in Chongqing city. A hawk tea producing area located in Chongqing city was selected as the study setting, and residents were randomly designated. Self-designed questionnaires were administered to collect data, including basic information, the behaviors of consumption of hawk tea, and various health information. Among the 4,363 respondents, 2,278 (52.2%) drank tea more 1 time per month and 957 (42.0%) were heavy drinkers. Among 2,278 Hawk tea drinkers, 62 reported various symptoms after drinking, and logistic regression…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFood Quality and Safety Studies · Fermentation and Sensory Analysis · Phytochemicals and Antioxidant Activities
