The Preeclampsia Foundation launched a new initiative that aims to close the maternal health equity gap and promote the use ...
That’s because it’s been five years since recommendations began changing about who should take the tiny little pill to ...
A new survey found that 1 in 5 adults “who say they have no personal or family history of heart attack or stroke,” reported “routinely” taking a low-dose aspirin ...
Aspirin is a blood thinner. Depending on your health condition, that can be beneficial or dangerous. Here's what medical ...
Consumer Reports has no financial relationship with any advertisers on this site. For decades, taking low-dose aspirin (81 mg) every day was widely recommended as an easy way to prevent heart ...
For years, healthy older adults were advised by doctors to take a low-dose aspirin daily as a way to reduce the risk of heart ...
Daily low-dose aspirin reduced the risk for colorectal cancer recurrence by roughly half in patients with mutations in the ...
Approximately 48% of people think that the benefits of taking low-dose aspirin every day to lower their risk of heart attack or stroke outweigh the risks, but they’re wrong, according to a survey from ...
It's not that aspirin is point-blank no longer recommended. But as medical professionals learn more about the potential benefits and downsides of daily low-dose aspirin consumption, their ...
As low-dose prophylactic aspirin therapy becomes common among older people, potential risks that are associated with such treatment assume increasing importance. In particular, some clinicians are ...
Among U.S. adults with no personal or family history of heart attack or stroke, over 1 in 4 people age 60 and up report regulary taking low-dose aspirin to reduce their risk of heart attack or stroke.
Low-dose aspirin significantly reduced risk for colorectal cancer recurrence among patients with mutations in the PI3K ...