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Are Supplements a Waste of Money and Do We Really Need Them After 60?

At your local grocery store, you’ve likely passed the health section and saw the seemingly endless rows of supplements lined on the shelves. From vitamin B to Calcium, there seems to be a supplement for just about every nutrient.

With so many options to choose from and a wide variety of claims regarding the health benefits of supplements, especially to the aging population, how do you decide which ones to take?

The answer to that question might surprise you: Take none.

Do Supplements Add to Our Health?

Vitamins and minerals have long been used to treat nutrient deficiencies. In recent decades supplements have been promoted as a means to achieve better health and longevity – but do they actually work?

Actually, there is no proof of the real benefits of most supplements.

Recently, a group of scientists reviewed nearly 180 randomized clinical trials on vitamin and mineral supplement use to determine if any benefit existed.

They discovered that the four most commonly used supplements – multivitamins, vitamin D, calcium, and vitamin C – showed no consistent benefit in preventing heart disease, heart attack, stroke, or death from any cause.

Not only that, niacin (vitamin B3) and antioxidant supplements (think vitamin E) were associated with an actual increase in risk of all-cause mortality. In this case, supplements were doing more harm than good.

The one bright light might be folate, but the evidence is weak.

In a single scientific study, folate, commonly known as vitamin B9, was shown to reduce stroke risk by 20%. That sounds really impressive until you take into account that this study was conducted in China and that dietary habits of the Chinese participants in the study were likely very different than those of typical Americans.

Many cereals and other foods in our country are fortified with folate, so the effect seen in China might not translate to the US.

Supplements Work for Specific Needs Only

There is no question that someone with iron deficiency would benefit from iron supplements or that a pregnant woman may want to take a folate supplement to help prevent birth defects because she has no appetite for leafy greens.

Many of us are vitamin D deficient because we live in northern climates with reduced sun exposure. The use of supplements in these cases is necessary, but the widespread use of supplements goes far beyond such specific situations.

In the absence of a nutrient deficiency and given the overall lack of benefit of supplement use, researchers encourage doctors not to routinely prescribe supplements to their patients. And this advice makes sense.

After all, ask yourself a simple question: Americans have been taking vitamin supplements for years but are we actually any healthier?

Better Health Lies in Quality Food

In fact, supplements aren’t the answer to your nutritional problems – food is. Unlike supplements, a healthy diet has been shown repeatedly to benefit health and health outcomes.

Example: Adding 10 grams of whole food fiber per day has been shown to decrease the risk of experiencing a heart attack by 14% and to reduce the risk of dying from any cause by 27%. Additionally, adding just 1 piece of fruit per day reduces your risk of stroke by 6%.

Eat Healthy and Enjoy Your Life

Supplements have never been shown to have this degree of effect, so I encourage you to focus on diet, not on supplement pills. And so long as you follow a whole food, plant-based eating plan, chances are high you will get all the vitamins and minerals your aging body needs to attain better health.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

What supplements do you take regularly? Why? Do you suffer from any deficiencies? Do you see any benefit you can definitely attribute to the supplement? Have you considered quitting the supplement and adding more of the foods that contain the nutrients you need? Please join the conversation!

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Kim

I take many supplements and at 67 feel great and have no chronic health issues. It has improved my health 100%.

Ava

I’ve heard that as a blanket statement from a cousin, who’s a doctor, but without the caveat of taking specific supplements for specific needs. He also stated that people who took them were swallowing the koolaid.

I shot back that if you don’t have a healthy gut you won’t absorb nutrients well from all the healthy food you eat, and it’s not always simple to get back to a healthy gut. I also take the fewest possible targeted supplements (because who likes swallowing pills): D, C, flax oil, B12, potassium, trace minerals, trace minerals, and lactoferrin. Without the B12 I can’t hardly think; my D is way low without that, the C does seem to boost my immune system, the lactoferrin gets my iron circulating otherwise I show too low; a side effect of taking the potassium, trace minerals and magnesium (which I take for muscle cramps) is that I don’t experience allergies to nature anymore. Occasionally I take a little zinc if I’m fighting something, or something else for a specific, temporary purpose.

So there you have it.

On the other hand I have a friend who takes everything under the sun, mostly based on her genetic weaknesses per 23 and me data. I have no idea if they’re really helpful to her for the long run and I certainly couldn’t tolerate the handfuls she takes.

Melody owen

I take Reiki vitamins and drink Ka Chava I work out twice a week and I am very healt

The Author

Elizabeth Klodas MD, FACC trained at Mayo Clinic and Johns Hopkins and is a practicing cardiologist in Minneapolis, MN. She specializes in heart disease prevention. She is also founder of Step One Foods https://steponefoods.com, a company dedicated to helping patients minimize their dependence on medications through strategic dietary change.

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