That statement is incomplete and misleading on its own. It’s a typical “warning-style” hook that needs context before it can be judged.
👉 “These tablets are not recommended because they may cause blood clots and…” — we can’t evaluate this properly without knowing which tablets are being referred to.
🧠 Important truth about “blood clot” warnings
Some medicines can slightly increase the risk of blood clots in certain people, but it depends entirely on the drug.
For example:
- Some hormonal contraceptives can slightly increase clot risk in some users
- Some medications are actually prescribed to prevent clots
- Risk varies by age, smoking, genetics, and health conditions
Related condition: Thrombosis
⚠️ Why this message is suspicious
This type of phrasing is often used in clickbait posts:
- “not recommended” (no source given)
- “may cause blood clots” (no percentage or evidence)
- sentence cut off (missing important details)
👉 Real medical warnings always include:
- exact medicine name
- risk level
- study or guideline source
🧠 Key reality
Not all medications with clot warnings are unsafe. In medicine:
- Benefits are weighed against risks
- Doctors prescribe based on individual patient risk
🚨 What you should do
If you see a post like this:
- Check the exact name of the tablet
- Don’t panic based on incomplete sentences
- Confirm with a doctor or pharmacist
✅ Bottom line
👉 This is not a complete or reliable medical warning
👉 The risk depends entirely on the specific medication
If you want, send me the full name of the tablets—I can tell you what the real evidence and risks actually are (clearly and safely) 👍