Emily Oster

2 minute read Emily Oster

Emily Oster

Is It Safe to Drink Tea During Pregnancy?

Q&A on licorice and ginger

Emily Oster

2 minute read

Hi Emily!

I’m about 6.5 months pregnant and was making tea (as I do with some frequency) the other night and noticed that both the ginger and licorice teas that I like say not to drink them during pregnancy! In digging around it seems that too much black licorice (which is in both teas) can be bad for you. Have you come across this before? I think everything is fine, but now I’m a little concerned that I’ve been unintentionally screwing up and I need to avoid the teas I like…

Thanks in advance

—Anonymous Tea Drinker

You’re right that the concern with both these teas is black licorice (or, more precisely, glycyrrhizin for which black licorice is the most common source). There are concerns about this product in hypertension in non-pregnant people and it’s known that very high levels of consumption can cause metabolic issues for some people. There are a couple of studies which link very high levels of consumption to adverse outcomes in pregnant people or their babies. This includes one study from 2001 suggesting high levels of consumption might lower gestational age and one from 2017 which indicated children of mothers who consume a lots of licorice might have significantly lower cognitive performance.

These studies in pregnancy seem to target very high levels of consumption — the 2017 study defines high consumption as >500mg per week, which would be about 16 cups of licorice tea a week. Their low exposure group still has some exposure, just less — up to the equivalent of about 8 cups of tea. This population isn’t being exposed through tea, but through candy. And both papers are based on the same small cohort of 1000 Finish women, where the high exposure group is only about 50 people. And, of course, the licorice consumption isn’t randomized.

My overall read of this is that if you’re drinking a lot of tea, like several cups a day, you might dial it back. The limitations in the research and the low concentrations of the chemical in tea suggest to me there is no need to cut out all together. Oh, and here is a preprint saying it might protect you against COVID-19. So, there’s that.

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