Millions taking aspirin without clear benefit

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Many people take aspirin every day to prevent a heart attack or stroke. But daily aspirin isn’t advised for everyone.

A survey found that about 29 million adults without heart disease take low-dose aspirin for prevention. But many of them shouldn’t under new guidelines.

Aspirin works by thinning the blood and preventing clots. But taking a daily aspirin can also increase the risk of bleeding.

Recent studies found that aspirin has little benefit for some people. As a result, experts no longer recommend daily low-dose aspirin for adults age 70 and older—or for people with a higher risk of bleeding, like those with stomach ulcers.

So how many people are affected by the new guidelines? To answer this, scientists surveyed 14,000 adults age 40 and older.

About 23% of people without heart disease were taking a daily aspirin for prevention. Almost a quarter of these did so without a health care provider’s recommendation.

Nearly half of people age 70 and older who did not have heart disease reported using aspirin daily. So did a quarter of people with a history of stomach ulcers.

“Our findings suggest that a substantial portion of adults may be taking aspirin without their physician’s advice and potentially without their knowledge,” says Dr. Christina Wee at Harvard University, who led the study.

Talk with your doctor if you’re taking aspirin daily or plan to start.

If you care about heart health, please read studies about this vitamin may hide heart attacks if you use it too much and findings of people who don’t do this may have instant death from heart attack.

For more information about heart disease prevention and treatment, please see recent studies about people with this heart problem need to use cannabis cautiously and results showing that eating whole eggs bad for heart health.