Wednesday, April 17

New study says evidence insufficient to recommend common vitamins


In to previous column, I discussed the limited efficacy of the $14 billion Americans spend annually on cold and flu supplements. The bottom line was that we can get the vast majority of our immune-boosting vitamins from a diverse healthy diet, good sleep hygiene, stress control and early morning sunlight.

now comes to massive meta-analysis from JAMA of 84 studies on vitamins and supplements. The aim of this review was to assess the benefits (or harms) of vitamins and minerals in healthy, non-pregnant adults in preventing cardiovascular disease and cancer. This review looked at beta-carotene (precursor to vitamin A), vitamin D and vitamin E. Here’s what the researchers found:

  • Beta-carotene: supplementation associated with increased risk of lung cancer and cardiovascular mortality.
  • Vitamins D and E: not associated with increased or decreased risk of all-cause mortality, cardiovascular disease or cancer. In short, no benefit.




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