‘Avoid Them at All Costs’: Cardiologist Issues the Most Forceful Warning Against Energy Drinks Published in 2026
A cardiologist has issued the most forceful medical warning against energy drink consumption published in 2026, telling consumers through MSN to avoid them at all costs in a statement that represents a categorical rejection of the entire energy drink category from a cardiovascular specialist. The cardiologist’s avoid at all costs language is unprecedented in its severity because medical professionals typically frame guidance in terms of moderation and risk management rather than absolute prohibition, suggesting that this cardiologist’s clinical experience with caffeine-related cardiac events has produced a level of concern that exceeds the measured language of published guidelines. The Alani Nu lawsuit alleging that large amounts of caffeine caused the seventeen-year-old Larissa Rodriguez’s death continues generating fresh coverage across About Lawsuits and specialist legal media, confirming that the litigation trajectory is accelerating rather than fading. 9News’s broadcast of Consumer Reports’ investigation into energy drink risks for teens extends the Consumer Reports findings from the March 26 briefing to the Denver television market.
Four Symptoms Warning as People Unknowingly Have Too Much Caffeine: Belfast Live, Plymouth Live, and UK Regional Media Sound the Alarm

Belfast Live, Plymouth Live, Buckinghamshire, and LancsLive have simultaneously published a warning about four symptoms that indicate people unknowingly have too much caffeine, creating a coordinated UK regional media campaign that reaches millions of readers across England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. The four-symptom framework provides consumers with specific physiological signals they can monitor to determine whether their personal caffeine intake has exceeded their individual tolerance threshold, moving beyond the abstract milligram-based guidelines that most consumers cannot practically apply to their daily habits. The Caffeine Addiction Recovery Month designation, documented by National Day Calendar, confirms that caffeine dependency has achieved the institutional recognition typically reserved for substances that health authorities consider sufficiently problematic to warrant dedicated awareness campaigns.
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Consumer Reports Energy Drink Investigation Reaches 9News Denver: How the Teen Risk Study Continues Penetrating Local Broadcast Markets
9News’s broadcast of the Consumer Reports energy drink investigation to Denver television audiences extends the teen caffeine risk findings into another major American media market, continuing the pattern where nationally published research reaches local audiences through the network of affiliated broadcast stations that collectively cover every metropolitan area in the United States.
Caffeine Addiction Recovery Month: National Day Calendar’s Designation Signals Institutional Recognition of Caffeine Dependency as a Public Health Concern
National Day Calendar’s designation of Caffeine Addiction Recovery Month provides the institutional recognition that caffeine dependency advocacy groups have been seeking, confirming that the health awareness infrastructure that has supported alcohol, tobacco, and drug recovery awareness months now includes caffeine as a substance whose dependency warrants dedicated public attention and recovery support resources.