Slash Your Heart Attack Risk in HALF With This Drug-Free Fix
Eat like a bird… exercise like a Navy SEAL…
And don’t forget to pop your aspirin and statin every day.
We’ve been giving the same heart advice to millions of Americans for decades now.
And how’s it going?
Well, heart disease is still killing more Americans than any other cause.
Ready to get off this hamster wheel… and maybe try something different?
What if you could protect your arteries and your heart – and reduce your heart attack risk by 52% — without touching a prescription drug?
New research proves its possible.
But it comes with a big catch that you need to know about.
Let’s start with the research…
A study known as TARGET-D followed 630 people with coronary disease, who were at high risk for a heart attack.
Half were treated with vitamin D until they reached target levels of between 40-80 ng/mL – and the other half weren’t treated with vitamin D at all.
After four years of monitoring, the results were crystal clear – the patients treated with vitamin D were 52% less likely to suffer a heart attack.
That’s right… they slashed their heart attack risk by more than HALF.
Now, that sounds impressive, but trust me… it’s even better than you think.
Because we have DECADES of research on aspirin and statins for heart attack prevention. And they have never – and I mean never – turned in results like this.
Based on these latest results, I can’t imagine why any doctor would be talking to their heart patients about aspirin and statins, and not their vitamin D levels.
That’s especially true since we’ve known for a long time that vitamin D is essential to heart function and reducing inflammation in blood vessels.
But before you go rushing out to buy vitamin D supplements, I want to pump the brakes a little.
I’m not opposed to taking vitamin D supplements – especially during the winer months, when there is less sun around.
But it’s still FAR better to get your vitamin D through sun exposure, and not a supplement bottle.
When sunlight hits your skin, it starts a chemical reaction that helps your body make its own vitamin D.
But this sunlight comes with an additional benefit – it also keeps your circadian rhythm healthy, which further reduces heart risk.
So your best bet is to get your D levels checked. And if they’re low, try to bring them up with sun exposure before turning to supplements.
View Sources
American Heart Association. (2025, November 9). Heart attack risk halved in adults with heart disease taking tailored vitamin D doses. American Heart Association Newsroom. https://newsroom.heart.org/news/heart-attack-risk-halved-in-adults-with-heart-disease-taking-tailored-vitamin-d-doses

