That headline is overly simplified and somewhat misleading. It refers to a real debate in medicine, but not “aspirin is bad” overall.
Aspirin is still an important drug—but its use has become more selective in recent years.
🧠 What doctors actually agree on today
👍 Where aspirin is still very useful
- After a heart attack or stroke (prevents another one)
- People with known heart disease or stents
👉 This is called secondary prevention and is strongly supported.
⚠️ Where benefits are limited (this is what headlines refer to)
- Healthy adults taking it daily “just in case”
- Older adults with no history of heart disease
Studies show:
- small reduction in heart attacks in some groups
- BUT increased risk of bleeding (especially stomach or brain bleeding)
🩸 Main risk of aspirin
- Internal bleeding (stomach ulcers, GI bleeding)
- Rare but serious brain bleeding risk
- Risk increases with age
🧠 What changed in guidelines
Modern guidelines now say:
Do NOT use daily aspirin for prevention unless a doctor specifically recommends it.
This is why you see headlines like “high risks, few benefits.”
❤️ Simple summary
- Aspirin is not useless
- It is very helpful for people with existing heart disease
- It is no longer recommended for routine prevention in healthy people
⚠️ Bottom line
The headline is about changing medical guidelines, not a warning against aspirin itself.
If you want, I can explain who should and should NOT take aspirin in simple categories (like age + health conditions).