That statement is the kind of fear-based warning that spreads online, but it’s incomplete and misleading without naming the actual medication.
There is no single category of “these tablets” that universally causes blood clots, thrombosis, and heart attacks for everyone. The risk depends entirely on the specific drug, dose, and the person using it.
Some medications can increase clot or cardiovascular risk in certain situations, for example:
- Combined hormonal contraceptives (estrogen-containing pills) → slightly increased risk of blood clots in some people
- Some hormone therapies (e.g., estrogen replacement)
- Certain anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in long-term/high-dose use → may increase heart risk in susceptible people
- Some stimulant medications in people with underlying heart disease
- Rarely, some specialized drugs with known clotting warnings
But here’s the key point:
- For most prescribed medicines, the absolute risk is low and carefully weighed against benefits
- Doctors prescribe them because untreated conditions (like pregnancy complications, severe pain, or chronic inflammation) can be more dangerous than the medication risk
When warnings like this are actually useful
They matter only if:
- A specific medication is named
- Your personal risk factors are known (smoking, obesity, hypertension, clot history, age, etc.)
- A doctor has evaluated your situation
For someone with hypertension or other conditions, the safest approach is not avoiding all medications—but using the right one under medical guidance.
If you tell me which tablets the post is referring to, I can explain the real risk accurately instead of the vague scare claim.
