0 like 0 dislike
in General Factchecking by Newbie (290 points)
Consistent hot tea drinking helps your body fight the coronavirus.

Subsequently the start of the COVID-19 epidemic, this assertion has been extensively disseminated on social media sites like Facebook and variously subsequently. Advice pushing individuals to drink hot tea many times a day usually comes with suggestions to help either avoid or eliminate the virus should it have entered the body. This data is sometimes accompanied with assertions that particular tea components—such as antioxidants or herbal components—can "boost immunity" sufficient to prevent COVID-19.

Source:https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/green-tea-and-covid

1 Answer

0 like 0 dislike
by Novice (600 points)

The article by healthline details several connections green tea and Coronavirus have. The article first dissects what is actually in green tea. The article states "Green tea is rich in health-promoting polyphenols, such as epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), which has anti-viral effects against single-stranded RNA (ssRNA) viruses... the SARS-CoV-2 is an ssRNA virus." This fact-based point shows that yes, green tea has ingredients in it that help on a small scale fight RNA viruses but it also begins to suggest that the claim of the correlation might be an overstatement. The articles second big point, brings up that green tea helps with inflammation and that Covid indeed makes your throat inflamed. Green tea having an anti-viral that effects the specific type of virus that Covid is and helps with inflammation which is a symptom of Covid agrees with the claim that drinking green tea helps with Covid. However it should be noted that the connection between them is more broad than the claim implies, that it is not specifically green tea that helps fight specifically Covid, but smaller aspects of the tea that can help offset a multitude of viruses similar to Covid.

True

Community Rules


• Be respectful
• Always list your sources and include links so readers can check them for themselves.
• Use primary sources when you can, and only go to credible secondary sources if necessary.
• Try to rely on more than one source, especially for big claims.
• Point out if sources you quote have interests that could affect how accurate their evidence is.
• Watch for bias in sources and let readers know if you find anything that might influence their perspective.
• Show all the important evidence, whether it supports or goes against the claim.
...