This is very much the case. It is a classic example of a managed deception embracing a correlation as a causal influence at work when it is not truly so. In other words, mild hypertension is experienced in people with mild heart risk and severe hypertension is experienced in people with severe heart risk, but blood pressure is not causing heart attacks or heart failure. Hypertension is an accompanying symptom that is viewed as the central problem when it is simply not, and treating hypertension will not be the life-saving measure it is believed to represent. We have pointed out before that while it is true that extremely high blood pressure can unduly strain the heart muscle and trigger a heart attack, it is the weakness of that muscle representing an upper boundary on performance that leads to an infarction. When an extreme episode is underway, medication to lower the blood pressure can be life-saving in the moment. But treating everyone according to arbitrary cutoffs and acceptable ranges of blood pressure is medically unimportant and carries significant risk in terms of liability from the inherent toxic nature of synthetic chemicals taken into the body.
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