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5 Myths About Vitamins

Posted: 04/20/2012 8:00 pm

By Brierley Wright, M.S., R.D., Nutrition Editor, EatingWell Magazine

A recent government study said more than half of all Americans take dietary supplements, which in my opinion is surprisingly high, considering these pills and powders aren’t regulated like drugs but like foods.

The Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA) of 1994 defined “dietary supplement” to include vitamins, minerals, botanicals and other ingredients, and ruled that supplements would be regulated like foods. This exempted companies from having to prove the safety or efficacy of their products -- entirely reasonable, given that the nutrients come from natural foods, say advocates. The law also permitted supplement makers to use several kinds of marketing claims (some that don’t require FDA approval), including structure/function statements, which describe how a nutrient is intended to affect the body.

Related: 4 Nutrients You Might Not Be Getting Enough Of

Allowing such claims -- without requiring proof of strong science to back them -- is why there’s so little conclusive science on supplements, say the law’s critics. “The marketing has been quite effective without studies,” says Irwin Rosenberg, M.D., senior scientist and interim director of the Neuroscience and Aging Laboratory at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University. Even some in the supplement industry warn that lax marketing can be misleading. “There are a few real egregious folks who go over the line with loose structure/function claims,” says Andrew Shao, Ph.D., Vice President, Global Product Science & Safety at Herbalife. “Unfortunately consumers get the message, ‘all supplement makers are out to dupe me.’” What do the claims really mean? The answers may surprise you. Here are 5 myths about vitamins busted, originally reported on in EatingWell Magazine by Nicci Micco.

Myth 1: All “Multivitamins” Are the Same

The Truth: There’s no legal definition for “multivitamin.” Manufacturers apply the term to any product supplying two or more vitamins (minerals, phytochemicals and herbs too). In a 2006 study of 26,735 people out of the University of Hawaii in Honolulu, the “multivitamins” subjects reported using included 1,246 different formulas. Nearly 70 percent were “one-a-day” types; 16 percent, B-complex blends; and 14 percent, “antioxidant” mixes. Products in the same group (e.g., B-complex) varied wildly; many provided megadoses of some nutrients.

Are you a vegetarian? Here’s how to get the nutrients you need.

The Bottom Line: Read labels to find a “multi” that doesn’t exceed 100 percent of the Daily Value (DV) for any nutrients.

Myth 2: What’s Listed on the Label Is What’s Really in the Product

The Truth: Supplement manufacturers must list each ingredient (and its quantity) in a product, but they don’t have to prove the accuracy of these lists. Limited in resources, the FDA doesn’t check that what’s inside a product jibes with what’s on its label, either. Often labels don’t match contents: 30 percent of “multivitamins” tested by ConsumerLab.com, an independent nutrition product testing service and consumer watchdog group, were “off” for at least one ingredient, says Tod Cooperman, M.D., the group’s president. Some delivered doses well below those listed on the label; one was tainted with potentially dangerous levels of lead.

Manufacturers can pay to have products tested by ConsumerLab.com or a similar independent company, U.S. Pharmacopeia (USP), usp.org, to verify that the formula: 1) is what it’s supposed to be, 2) doesn’t contain contaminants, and 3) dissolves properly in the body. (Note: Such certification doesn’t guarantee safety or effectiveness, just that a product is what the label says.) “Passing” products earn the right to bear a special seal. The absence of a seal doesn’t necessarily signal a bad product: Big companies often do their own quality-assurance testing.

The Bottom Line: Buy products with a certified seal -- such as the USP seal or certification from ConsumerLab.com -- or an established brand.

Myth 3: Calcium Is Calcium

The Truth: Vitamins and minerals occur in different forms -- all of which may not function equally. A 2005 study in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association showed that an orange juice fortified with calcium citrate malate was absorbed 48 percent better than one fortified with the same amount of calcium in a different form. Manufacturers don’t have to prove that nutrients they add to foods are actually absorbed.

Bottom line: A dietitian can help you pick products likely to be well absorbed.

Myth 4: Structure/Function Claims Are Backed By Solid Science

The Truth: Structure/function claims (e.g., "Zinc helps maintain immunity,") describe what an ingredient is intended to do in the body. Often, the research behind the claim has no scientific consensus. (Look closely: Packages with structure/function claims must also bear the disclaimer, “This statement has not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.”) “Claim-featured” nutrients sometimes are included purely for marketing.

Example: Research on phytochemicals (such as lycopene) is still new, and their potential benefits are poorly understood. Yet “manufacturers will throw in just a tiny bit,” says Cooperman. “If consumers have heard of an ingredient, they assume it has some value.” “Premium” ingredients can mean the difference between charging $50, versus $8, for a bottle of multivitamins.

The Bottom Line: Watch out for “buzz word” nutrients and claims that appear too good to be true.

Don’t Miss: 9 Foods That Help You Get a Better Night's Sleep

Myth 5: “Studies Have Shown…” Means That Clinical Research Conclusively Showed Whatever Statement Follows

The Truth: Most studies that “show” a vitamin/mineral supplement provides a health benefit are observational ones, which survey people about various behaviors (e.g., diet, exercise, supplement use), then use statistical analyses to identify links with disease. When an observational research finds, “People who took a multivitamin, daily, for ‘X’ number of years have an ‘X’ percent lower chance of developing colon cancer than those who didn’t,” one can’t assume that the multivitamin (not a combination of factors) was fully responsible. Surveys show that supplement users tend to practice other healthy habits, too -- eating lots of vegetables, shunning cigarettes and exercising regularly -- so it’s hard to tease out a single protective factor.

This is why diet/disease links found in observational studies must be confirmed in controlled randomized clinical trials. In these “gold-standard” investigations, researchers deliver specific nutrient doses to one group and placebo “sugar supplements” to another (neither the subjects nor the investigators know who’s getting what) to test whether a supplement is really responsible for observed benefits.

The Bottom Line: Supplement makers don’t have to say how scientifically conclusive their studies are.

Related: 10 Best and Worst Proteins for Your Diet

Do you take a dietary supplement?


By Brierley Wright, M.S., R.D.

Brierley Wright
Brierley's interest in nutrition and food come together in her position as nutrition editor at EatingWell. Brierley holds a master's degree in Nutrition Communication from the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University. A Registered Dietitian, she completed her undergraduate degree at the University of Vermont.

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By Brierley Wright, M.S., R.D., Nutrition Editor, EatingWell Magazine A recent government study said more than half of all Americans take dietary supplements, which in my opinion is surprisingly high...
By Brierley Wright, M.S., R.D., Nutrition Editor, EatingWell Magazine A recent government study said more than half of all Americans take dietary supplements, which in my opinion is surprisingly high...
 
 
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rodjard
I Update my brain frequently
11:55 PM on 04/24/2012
Big Pharma would have you believe that only prescription
medication will do you any good at all.
Consider the sources of the information you get and their motives.
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chiara0
The sleep of reason produces monsters.
09:33 PM on 04/23/2012
I take vitamin and mineral supplements, however I carefully research what I would buy. I do not get a multi-vitamin but buy everything in a separate pill, since I know what I want and how much of it. I also take essential fatty acids. I have done this for many years now along with other health directives of my own creation after careful research. My health is completely changed from my youth and I can only say, that if you are serious about being the best you can be, you can find a way through all the garbage, if you read and learn and make intelligent choices and stick with them.
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08:27 PM on 04/23/2012
As a manufacturer in the industry, Ms. Brierley Wright is either blissfully unaware of how nutraceuticals are regulated or conveniently spinning this argument to defend someone running scared from the truth. When these tests come back negative on ingredients or even off by a few percentage points, the product gets pulled, the manufacturer gets fined or even closed. Didn't print that... I guess there is little room for truth nowadays.
I would read a word of this woman's banter in the future. Perhaps she should research a subject before writing about it.
03:15 PM on 04/23/2012
As a vegetarian, I take a multivitamin everyday to ensure that I am supplementing my diet. However, I have friends who will down handfuls of various vitamins in what they consider to be a healthy decision. I always maintain that the best place to get vitamins and minerals is in the food that we eat. We are meant to eat spinach and rice, not powders and pills.
11:34 AM on 04/23/2012
Tony Baja agrees with the author Brierley Wright about most multivitamins. But articles today at;
www.http://tony-baja-health-resort.blogspot.com/
show a vitamin K-2 as very important for a healthy heart. A japanese researcher Dr. Hiroyuki Sumi tested this vitamin, and his results were encouraging.
but for calcium supplements the tests were NOT as good.
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MiMi LLawsonn
Just my opinion****
09:10 AM on 04/23/2012
Chronic Pain ???????? Be sure and have your Vitamin D level checked....there is a high percentage of people who have very LOW Vitamin D...and low Vitamin D can cause additional pain for some people...it is a simple blood test....BUT YOU MUST ASK the doctor to check it...as it is not included in the normal bloodwork that the doctors do....this is important....as it might make a big difference in your pain levels too.
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RobParker
08:40 AM on 04/23/2012
the FDA is a lie
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01:05 AM on 04/23/2012
This is a good article. Telling people to buy quality supplements backed by good evidence is plainly good advice.
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Sydney Light
08:56 PM on 04/22/2012
This is the second article I've read as part of the "Healthy Living" section that tried to dissuade people from taking vitamins. If this is a truly unbiased news portal, where is the other side? I have more energy and health than I did ten years ago, and I take vitamins every day, when I do not take them, my vitality suffers, as well as my overall health. Simple Vitamin C with bioflavanoids will probably help diminish or prevent about 50% of cancers, as well as many other diseases. I believe there are people who deliberately suppress this information. I give B vitamins to all my pets, and their coats, eyesight, and levels of flea infestation are greatly helped. I cannot understand why a reputable news service would disseminate untruthful and unhelpful information such as presented above. It would behoove the regulatory agencies to work on tobacco, alcohol, pesticide, and prescription drug regulation. That is where the real health problems are coming from, and they know it.
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01:02 AM on 04/23/2012
"'Simple Vitamin C with bioflavanoids will probably help diminish or prevent about 50% of cancers, as well as many other diseases."

Since you're comfortable saying "about 50% of cancers" care to put a number on "will probably help"? Like, greater than 50% probability of helping about 50% of cancers?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
No death panels
There's no man with a trumpet. Only me.
08:43 AM on 04/23/2012
Don't know about cancer but at least you won't get scurvy.
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Sydney Light
07:45 PM on 04/23/2012
Never know unless you try it...
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USAGramma
Somewhere in dog heaven Seamus wags his tail ;o)
08:43 PM on 04/22/2012
Seems some government regulation to protect both the health and the pocketbooks of the people is in order. Who is it again who wants to put an end to government regulations?
03:20 PM on 04/22/2012
Eat healthy and get some exercise.

Reduce the fat, salt and sugar in your diet.

If you take a supplement be sure to buy from a reputable source.
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emperance
You / Josephine. I care, too.
02:46 PM on 04/22/2012
Better to buy insurance than not. Take your vitamins.
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Sydney Light
08:57 PM on 04/22/2012
Exactly. The best health insurance is prevention. Vitamins are a part of that, and they work.
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IndyvoterRob
Free Adam Kokesh!
02:35 PM on 04/22/2012
I take Vitamin D in liquid form and drink protein shakes after working out or sometimes in the morning.

I stopped taking multi-vitamins after learning they are a waste of money. Simply go down to any grocery and buy a bag of mixed vegetables which have zucchini, squash, broccoli and carrots and add them to your lentils or chicken while cooking.

Whole unprocessed foods are the key so vitamins are unnecessary. I only take D due to living in the Northwest and not getting enough sunshine exposure.

I'm gradually switching to unprocessed foods although some flash frozen processed vegetables are still fine and dandy.
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Lily P
Sofa King Awesome!
02:30 PM on 04/22/2012
Good points. When will the FDA begin to tell these companies they need to clearly tell consumers what is in their product? It made a huge difference for me when I switched from a cheap B complex to a well known, high quality B complex.
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Sydney Light
09:00 PM on 04/22/2012
Yes, you are right. However, if you spend more on a good, whole grain loaf of bread, you get better bread. Would you like the government to regulate everything that gets better if you spend more? That would include a lot of stuff, pretty much everything. Sometimes less regulation is more. Educate yourself and your friends and family. Knowledge is power.