
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Statins save lives by lowering the level of 'bad' cholesterol in our blood, reducing the risk of heart attacks and strokes. But warnings about potential aches and pains in our muscles has put off some people from taking them. UK scientists have analysed the best statin trials and found that these side effects are actually rare – and the benefits outweigh the risks. We hear from Professor Colin Baigent in Oxford about how this study should reassure those who need to take them.
On Health Check we like to bring you the best possible evidence – and for that we rely on research which has been peer reviewed. Professor Matt Fox from Boston University explains how scrutinising the research of his peers takes time and is unpaid – a situation which he believes is unsustainable.
The bleeding disorder haemophilia B means the blood doesn’t clot properly, so a cut or even a bruise can have serious consequences. Elliott who lives in the UK is one of the first people to try a new gene therapy which has effectively cured his haemophilia.
And we hear news of a study which claims that tea drinkers might live longer.
Presenter: Claudia Hammond
(Picture: A generic pack of statins with a stethoscope. Photo credit: Roger Ashford/Getty Images.)
By BBC World Service4.7
7979 ratings
Statins save lives by lowering the level of 'bad' cholesterol in our blood, reducing the risk of heart attacks and strokes. But warnings about potential aches and pains in our muscles has put off some people from taking them. UK scientists have analysed the best statin trials and found that these side effects are actually rare – and the benefits outweigh the risks. We hear from Professor Colin Baigent in Oxford about how this study should reassure those who need to take them.
On Health Check we like to bring you the best possible evidence – and for that we rely on research which has been peer reviewed. Professor Matt Fox from Boston University explains how scrutinising the research of his peers takes time and is unpaid – a situation which he believes is unsustainable.
The bleeding disorder haemophilia B means the blood doesn’t clot properly, so a cut or even a bruise can have serious consequences. Elliott who lives in the UK is one of the first people to try a new gene therapy which has effectively cured his haemophilia.
And we hear news of a study which claims that tea drinkers might live longer.
Presenter: Claudia Hammond
(Picture: A generic pack of statins with a stethoscope. Photo credit: Roger Ashford/Getty Images.)

7,724 Listeners

879 Listeners

1,037 Listeners

5,541 Listeners

1,881 Listeners

725 Listeners

1,832 Listeners

1,060 Listeners

2,004 Listeners

616 Listeners

267 Listeners

347 Listeners

955 Listeners

430 Listeners

415 Listeners

86 Listeners

247 Listeners

354 Listeners

353 Listeners

84 Listeners

474 Listeners

242 Listeners

150 Listeners

3,162 Listeners

1,639 Listeners