
Anti Aging Articles
Vitamin and Supplement Hype
Michael Brickey, Ph.D.
Magazines are full of articles such as,
folic acid (Vitamin E, Beta Carotene, etc.) prevents.... This is
presented as if it were news. The articles imply we should run out and
buy the supplements. Such articles are especially common in magazines
that advertise vitamins and supplements. Every month they seem to find
or recycle a couple more vitamins and supplements.
What’s wrong? If you were to take all of the
vitamins and supplements they recommend in a piecemeal fashion you would
be heavily taxing your liver and your wallet. Many of these vitamins and
supplements are included in a multiple vitamin and taking both may be
taking too much. Many vitamins and supplements can cause serious health
problems if taken in extreme amounts.
The articles give little consideration to
how the vitamin or supplement interacts with other vitamins and
supplements, e.g., high doses of Vitamin C can inhibit the absorption of
B-12, calcium needs vitamin D. Supplements such as Gingko Biloba and
aspirin thin the blood, which may or may not be desirable and certainly
needs to be considered if you are going to have surgery.
The research often isn’t realistic. No one
questions that we need folic acid. But the research should have large
numbers of people in an experimental and placebo groups and a treatment
program that lasts several years. The control group should take a good
daily multiple vitamin with the amount of folic acid that multiple
vitamins usually contain. The treatment group would take the same
multiple vitamin plus additional folic acid. Results should show a
statistically and clinically significant effect. Research should also
control for socioeconomic factors (people who normally take vitamins
tend to be better educated, more affluent, eat more healthily, and
exercise more). Rarely do popular press articles meet these criteria.
As consumers we need to eat healthy foods
and take a good multiple vitamin as an insurance policy against whatever
our diet misses. Then ask what special needs you have that call for
additional supplements, e.g., men taking saw palmetto to help prevent
prostate cancer, people with a risk of heart disease taking daily low
dose aspirin, women who have problems with urinary tract infections
drinking cranberry juice or using cranberry extract. Overdoing
supplements and piecemeal use of supplements may cause more problems
than they help.
Most people get enough iron from their food
and don’t need iron in their vitamins. Iron in particular can contribute
to free radical damage. People who may need iron in vitamins or
supplements include: children, women who menstruate, people who donate
blood, and people who are anemic.
On the lighter side, there is the story
about two cows that saw a milk tank truck drive by. In large bold
letters it said, Pasteurized, Homogenized, Vitamin A added. One cow
turned to the other and said, “makes you feel sort of inadequate,
doesn’t it?”
The bottom line is to take a good daily
multiple vitamin geared to your age and gender. Then consider if there
are any other supplements you need beyond what your multiple vitamin is
providing. Only take those that fit with your plan. Largely ignore the
endless piecemeal articles on miraculous vitamins and supplements.
________________
This article may be reprinted in E-zines, newsletters, newspapers,
and magazines provided
they the content is not edited and the following attribution is given:
Dr. Michael Brickey is President of the Ageless Lifestyles Institute
and author of
Defy Aging. His new book,
52 baby steps to Grow
Young, gives two-page-a-week practical steps for developing a
youthful mindset at every age. Further information is at
www.DrBrickey.com.
Formatting may be changed and you may use one of the web site
pictures of the author or books to accompany the article. If published
online, please keep live links.
For
further information on Contact :
Michael Brickey, Ph.D.
President
Ageless Lifestyles Institute
865 College Ave.
Columbus, OH 43209
614-237-4556
articles@DrBrickey.com
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