That statement is incomplete, and as written it’s misleading.
“Doctor warns against a popular habit and risk of heart attack doubles” sounds like a headline, but it doesn’t specify which habit, and without that, it can’t be judged scientifically.
Different habits have very different evidence levels:
- Smoking → clearly increases risk of Myocardial infarction (strong, well-proven link)
- Chronic sleep deprivation → associated with higher heart risk (but not a simple “doubles risk” rule for everyone)
- High stress, poor diet, inactivity → contribute over time, but effects vary
- Random viral claims often exaggerate numbers like “doubles risk” without context
Key point
In real medical research, you rarely see a universal claim like “one habit = risk doubles” unless:
- it’s a very specific behavior
- in a defined population
- under controlled study conditions
Most of the time, headlines oversimplify or exaggerate.
If you tell me which habit you’re referring to, I can break down what science actually says about it.