If you’ve been diagnosed with some form of heart disease, be it angina, hypertension, thrombosis, or you’ve had a stroke or heart attack, the chances are you will be prescribed a cocktail of prescribed drugs. These generally include medications designed to lower your cholesterol, prescriptions to lower blood pressure, and blood thinning drugs.
The fact is, all of these drugs have associated side effects. Another fact is that there are alternative natural medicines, diet, and lifestyle changes that achieve the same effects, often with a fraction, if any, of the side effects. Which then begs the question, “what should you be doing to reduce your risk of cardiovascular disease?”
While it’s not my job to recommend that you change any medication you have been prescribed by your doctor, I would like to share with you the pluses and minuses of these drugs, then look at valid alternative approaches.
Answers to these questions & more are available to 100% Health Club Members
Measuring your risk of heart disease – the main contributory factors
How good are heart medications?
The natural alternatives and their downsides
Lifestyle and dietary changes
What are the best supplements and dosage?






