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Why are nearly two-thirds of heart patients now getting stomach acid blockers at discharge?

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Why are nearly two-thirds of heart patients now getting stomach acid blockers at discharge?
Photo by Dmytro Vynohradov / Unsplash

Imagine walking out of the hospital with a heart condition and being handed a new daily pill for your stomach. That is exactly what happened to many patients in a recent look at medical records at Beijing Tongren Hospital. The researchers found that giving stomach acid blockers, known as proton pump inhibitors, became much more common over time. In the early years, only about 21% of patients received them. By the late years, that number climbed to 64%. Overall, nearly half of all patients in this group got the medication.

The study looked at people with acute coronary syndrome, which includes heart attacks, and atrial fibrillation, a type of irregular heartbeat. These are serious conditions that require careful management. The doctors in this group were increasingly choosing to add these stomach medicines when sending patients home. The data shows a clear trend of increasing use, but the study did not find any reported safety issues, serious side effects, or reasons patients had to stop taking the drugs.

This change in practice is significant because it reflects how medical habits evolve. However, because this was a snapshot of records rather than a long-term experiment, we cannot say for sure if these drugs improve heart health or cause hidden problems. The study simply tells us that doctors are prescribing them much more often now. Patients should talk to their own doctors about whether this specific medication is right for their unique situation and medical history.

What this means for you:
Stomach acid blocker use for heart patients rose sharply from 2010 to 2018, though the study did not prove they help or hurt recovery.
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