Beta blockers are everywhere. More than 26 million Americans take them for blood pressure, heart rhythm, and heart attack recovery. Some even use them for stage fright. They can be lifesaving for weak hearts. But for many others, the benefits are unclear and the side effects all too real.
Fatigue, weight gain, erectile dysfunction, and higher blood sugar are among the costs patients rarely hear about. In a recent article, I noted trials showing little benefit for heart-attack survivors with normal heart function. Women, meanwhile, faced higher risks of repeat events or hospitalization. Still, more than 80 percent of patients leave the hospital with a prescription, and most keep taking the pills for years.
That’s where deprescribing comes in. A yearly “medication reconciliation”—a simple review of what you’re taking and why—can reveal drugs you may not need anymore. Cardiologist Andrew Freeman says his favorite clinic days are when patients who’ve made lifestyle changes ask if it’s time to cut back. Often, the answer is yes.
The best alternatives aren’t more prescriptions—they’re daily habits. Walking, better sleep, stress relief, sunlight, and a diet rich in whole foods all lower blood pressure and strengthen the heart. Supplements like magnesium, CoQ10, and omega-3s can help too, but they work best as part of those bigger lifestyle changes.
Medications have their place, but they don’t always have to be lifelong companions. Movement, rest, nourishment, and calm are foundations that protect the heart, whether or not medicine is part of the plan.
Traditional Chinese medicine offers simple tools that can quickly and naturally lower high blood pressure, complementing or reducing the need for medication.
Packed with potassium and magnesium, bananas help relax blood vessels and lower blood pressure, with both green and ripe varieties offering unique benefits for heart health.
A study of nursing home residents found that deprescribing blood pressure medications was linked to slower cognitive decline, especially in those with dementia, raising questions about how aggressively older adults should be treated.
Thanks for reading. Stay tuned for our next edition coming your way next week.
Want to wake up with us every morning?
Subscribe to Rise & Shine.
Thank you for being a subscriber!
If you love this newsletter, please share it with your friends and let them know they can sign up and browse all of our newsletters here.
Your Feedback
We’d love to hear from you. If you have any suggestions for us to improve or a wellness story that you’d like us to cover, you can email me at healthnewsletter@epochtimes.nyc
We may feature an excerpt of your response in the next newsletter.
You are receiving this email because you subscribed to The Epoch Times.
The information in this newsletter is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care professional and is not intended as medical advice. It is intended as a sharing of knowledge and information from the research and experience of many experts and journalists. The Epoch Times encourages you to make your own health care decisions based upon your research and in partnership with a qualified health care professional.