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Trump says he takes a higher dose of aspirin than doctors recommend
Summary
President Trump told The Wall Street Journal he takes 325 mg of aspirin daily and has done so for about 25 years; experts in the article note that is higher than the usual 81 mg low-dose and that bleeding risk increases with age.
Content
President Donald Trump told The Wall Street Journal that he takes a 325 milligram aspirin each day and has done so for about 25 years. That dose is higher than the 81 milligram low-dose commonly used for cardiovascular prevention. Since 2022, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force has advised that adults over 60 not start daily aspirin to prevent heart disease. Doctors quoted in the article emphasized bleeding risk increases with age and that higher doses are generally unnecessary.
Key points:
- The president reported taking 325 mg of aspirin daily and said he has done so for roughly 25 years.
- A 325 mg dose is four times the 81 mg low-dose commonly used for cardiovascular prevention.
- The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommends adults over 60 not start daily aspirin for prevention and notes stopping around 75 may be reasonable.
- Experts in the article said aspirin raises bleeding risk with age and that alcohol can increase that risk; they described 325 mg as usually unnecessary though tolerable for some who have already used it.
Summary:
The president's disclosure prompted expert comment noting his reported dose is higher than typical preventive aspirin and that bleeding risk rises with age. Undetermined at this time.
