| Why Take
Vitamin/Mineral Supplements?
This issue was a hard one for me philosophically for many, many
years. My thought was how could it possibly be better for people
to eat pills than the food of this world of which we are a part?
After all, while we do know quite a bit about nutrition and physiology,
there is so very much more that we do not know, and taking a supplement
might cause unanticipated ill effects. The conclusion was that taking
supplements was foolish at best and possibly harmful.
As the decades
rolled by, more and more research piled up, demonstrating the benefits
of taking vitamin and mineral supplementation. Chinks appeared in
my intellectual armor. The final blow came one day when I read a
very simple study conducted by a researcher who followed chimpanzees
around in the jungle collecting what they ate. He learned that these
12 pound chimpanzees were averaging over 600 mg of vitamin C every
day from the wild foods they ate. It struck me that the widespread
concern over the deterioration of the nutrient content of the foods
we eat from over farmed soil may well not be the biggest issue.
Early humans collected and ate wild plants. Many of those plants
had much higher concentrations of nutrients than can be found in
the products of today's domesticated agriculture. As determination
is good but stubbornness is not, I had to wave the white flag.
One of the "truths"
we can cull from the research on vitamin and mineral supplementation
is that prevention should be the goal. Many supplements have a powerful
preventive effect but do little after the body becomes diseased.
Proving once again the customary wisdom that an ounce of prevention
is worth a pound of cure.
While the evidence
for taking routine vitamin and mineral supplementation is compelling,
it is important to guard against the American "if a little is good,
more is better" attitude. Excessive amounts of supplements can harm,
as can the wrong forms of these nutrients. For example, dietary
consumption of high doses of natural mixed carotenoids (including
beta carotene) reduces the risk of lung cancer, but taking synthetic
beta carotene increases the risk of the same cancer.
My recommendation
is to take supplements, but with some reservations. As always, your
individual needs and risks must be considered. The dosages should
be reasonable and based upon good scientific evidence of efficacy
and/or safety. Finally, you should take the correct form of the
nutrient in a form as close to its natural food form as is possible.
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