“…Patients with score¼0 are considered at low risk of stroke, and either antiplatelets or no prophylaxis is considered acceptable. [10][11][12] If anticoagulation was not prescribed, the treating physician was asked to explain the reason for not prescribing it from a set of multiple-choice possibilities; we included the most frequent causes of a lack of prescription of anticoagulation stated in daily practice studies, 3,4,8,9,[15][16][17] whether adequate or not according to the available evidence, with the aim of capturing the main reasons for this provider behavior: advanced age, disability, allergy, drug abuse (alcohol or illicit substances), poor therapeutic compliance, frequent falls, previous hemorrhage related to oral anticoagulants, potential risk of hemorrhage (active peptic disease, neoplasm, recent bleeding unrelated to anticoagulants, recent stroke, hemostasis disorder, vascular or genitourinary diseases with a high risk of bleeding, and recent surgery or severe trauma), patient's rejection, decision transferred to other specialist, or not considered indicated.…”