That sentence is a typical clickbait warning headline and it is not medically meaningful on its own.
It’s missing the most important part: what exact habit are they talking about? Without that, “risk of heart attack doubles” has no scientific value.
🧠 What doctors actually mean in real studies
In real medical research, doctors don’t say vague things like this. They say:
- “Smoking increases risk of Myocardial infarction by X times”
- “Sedentary lifestyle increases cardiovascular risk”
- “Excess sugar intake increases risk of Cardiovascular disease”
But always with:
- a specific habit
- a specific population
- measurable data
🚩 Why your sentence is suspicious
- ❌ No habit mentioned (“popular habit of… what?”)
- ❌ No study or source
- ❌ Extreme claim (“doubles risk”) without context
- ❌ Fear-based wording (“strongly warns”)
This is usually used for:
- social media engagement
- YouTube health clickbait
- selling supplements or courses
❤️ Real examples of habits that do increase heart risk
These are medically proven:
- Smoking
- Lack of physical activity
- High blood pressure
- Poor diet (high salt, trans fats)
- Chronic stress and poor sleep
💬 Bottom line
A sentence like this is not a medical warning by itself—it’s incomplete and likely clickbait. Real medical advice always includes clear details and context.
If you want, paste the full post or tell me the “habit” they are talking about, and I’ll break down whether it’s true or exaggerated.