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Previous research has shown that patients with known cardiovascular disease (CVD) are less likely to receive these drugs as they get older, and women are less likely than men to get these drugs. Whether the same is true for primary prevention of CVD is unclear. In this cross-sectional U.K. study, investigators assessed the effects of age and sex on primary prevention of CVD in 37,000 patients (age, ≥40).
The proportion of patients who received antihypertensive drugs increased with age from 5% among the youngest patients (age range, 40–44) to 57% among the oldest patients (age, ≥85). In fact, the likelihood of receiving an antihypertensive drug prescription increased significantly with each 5-year increment up to age 84 but not for age ≥85. T…