Skip to content
Health News Digest.
Menu
Menu

The Truth About Dietary Supplements

Posted on January 14, 2013

Harvard_Health_Pub_2_14.jpg

(HealthNewsDigest.com) – BOSTON-More than half of American women (and men) reach for a supplement bottle to get the nutrition insurance they think they need. But nutritional supplements rarely live up to their hype, reports the January 2013 issue of Harvard Women’s Health Watch.

Over the years there has been a lot of highly positive news about supplements. Antioxidants such as vitamin E were once seen as a promising silver bullet against heart disease, cancer, and Alzheimer’s disease. Omega-3 fatty acids were once touted for warding off strokes and other cardiovascular events. The latest supplement in the spotlight, vitamin D, is being eyed as a possible defense against a long list of diseases, including cancer, diabetes, depression, and even the common cold.

But here’s the big caveat: much of the most exciting research included observational studies, which can’t show cause and effect. Observational studies follow large groups of people who chose to take supplement. While that strategy can yield useful information, it isn’t nearly as reliable as testing a particular supplement against a placebo (inactive pill) in a controlled setting. When that was done, the more stringent randomized controlled trials often found no effect for the supplement.

“Often the enthusiasm for these vitamins and supplements outpaces the evidence. And when the rigorous evidence is available from randomized controlled trials, often the results are at odds with the results of the observational studies,” explains Dr. JoAnn Manson, chief of preventive medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, and principal investigator of a large randomized trial known as VITAL (VITamin D and OmegA-3 TriaL).

We need a variety of nutrients each day to stay healthy, including calcium and vitamin D to protect our bones, folic acid to produce and maintain new cells, vitamin A to preserve a healthy immune system and vision, and many, many more. Yet the source of these nutrients is important. “Usually it is best to try to get vitamins, minerals, and nutrients from food as opposed to supplements,” Dr. Manson says.

Read the full-length article: “Dietary supplements: Do they help or hurt?”

Also in the January 2013 issue of the Harvard Women’s Health Watch:

  • Why does alcohol affect women differently than men?
  • When you should be checked for a hearing problem
  • Hair loss affects women, too
  • “Hidden” thyroid problems

Harvard Women’s Health Watch is available from Harvard Health Publications, the publishing division of Harvard Medical School, for $20 per year. Subscribe at www.health.harvard.edu/womens or by calling 877-649-9457 (toll-free).

XXX

 

For advertising and promotion on www.HealthNewsDigest.com contact Mike McCurdy at: [email protected]  or call 877-634-9180. We are syndicated worldwide and read in 164 countries. We also have over 7,000 journalists as subscribers who may use our content for their own media!

 

 

 

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Archive

Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Sign up for our Newsletter
For Email Marketing you can trust

Recent Posts

  • As Foundation for ‘Excited Delirium’ Diagnosis Cracks, Fallout Spreads
  • Millions in Opioid Settlement Funds Sit Untouched as Overdose Deaths Rise
  • Sign Up for Well’s 6-Day Energy Challenge
  • William P. Murphy Jr., Innovator of Life-Saving Medical Tools, Dies at 100
  • How Abigail Echo-Hawk Uses Indigenous Data to Close the Equity Gap

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

Categories

©2025 Health News Digest. | Design: Newspaperly WordPress Theme