In recent years, newspapers have been trumpeting the news that vitamins C, D and E—as well as multi-vitamins preparations—do not prevent heart attack, stroke or cancer. These reports have led to a great deal of confusion and disillusionment among health-conscious consumers, many of whom already take supplements and are genuinely interested in practical ways to bolster their health and well-being. But is it really true that vitamin supplements are a waste of money and possibly even harmful for you? What are we to make of recent media pronouncements that most people are popping these pills without deriving any benefit whatsoever?
First of all, it’s important to understand that the vast majority of these negative reports are, in reality, old news wrapped in tabloid-style headlines. Many news reports fall woefully short of telling the whole story about a scientific study or about the conclusions of the scientific community regarding a specific issue. Media reports often present a study’s findings in a scattershot, fragmented manner, and without the proper scientific context—for example, by failing to acknowledge the many studies that have, in fact, found vitamins to be beneficial to the people who take them.
Jane Brody’s Personal Health column in the 24 March 2009 edition of the New York Times is a case in point. The report was titled “Extra Vitamin E: No Benefit, Maybe Harm.” Because Brody is widely respected as a health journalist, her messages are often taken as gospel. But those who understand the fundamentals of nutrition and the science of supplements can read between the lines. For example, before discussing the vitamin E research, Brody makes this comment: “Some vitamin E enthusiasts object that the clinical studies used what they consider the wrong form of the vitamin, saying that each of the vitamin’s eight forms has its own biological activity. But the kind of vitamin E used in most studies, alpha-tocopherol, is the most active form in humans, according to the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH’s) Office of Dietary Supplements.”
In that single, artful statement, the esteemed Times journalist managed to dismiss the crucial argument that mixed tocopherols—the eight forms of vitamin E to which she alludes—have effects that differ markedly from those of alpha tocopherol. Rather than discuss the science that demonstrates the superiority of mixed tocopherols, the forms that are naturally present in food, she points to the NIH—which happens to be the main source of funding for the vitamin E clinical trials she subsequently cites—as the final word on whether alpha tocopherol, in isolation, is a valid form of micronutrient for study. Never mind that human studies published in peer-reviewed scientific journals have shown that mixed tocopherols, when compared to alpha-tocopherol alone, are far more powerful in protecting cells against the ravages of free radicals and maintaining various measures of cardiovascular health. Some studies suggest that gamma-tocopherol and tocopherol mixtures exert more potent effects against cancer as well.
Anytime you announce something that runs counter to popular wisdom, you have an opportunity to glamorize the topic and sell more copy. Because everyone expects vitamins to have a beneficial impact on health, negative sound bytes are a boon to media interests. This is why the more favorable-sounding studies are rarely scooped up for a headline—and there are many. For example, the US Nutritional Prevention of Cancer Trial demonstrated a statistically significant reduction in lung cancer incidence with selenium supplementation, with 200 micrograms per day cutting the incidence of cancer by nearly 50%. Lung cancer is the number one killer cancer in the U.S., so one would expect to see such findings in the headlines. Sadly, however, because such findings are what most people would expect, they rarely garner the kind of media attention received by negative studies.
In the early 1990s, several large population studies showed significant decreases in cardiovascular disease in people who consumed more vitamin C or vitamin E. For example, in a 10-year study conducted at UCLA, men who supplemented daily with 800 mg of vitamin C lived six years longer on average than men who consumed the recommended daily allowance (RDA) of 60 mg a day. The study, which enrolled over 11,000 people, showed that the higher vitamin C intake lowered the death rate from cardiovascular disease by 42%.
Similarly, several clinical trials have found that a combination dietary supplement of vitamins and minerals or a probiotic agent (Lactobacillus casei) may lower recurrence rates for people with bladder cancer, as reported in the September 2003 issue of Current Opinion in Urology. One randomized controlled trial, conducted by urologist David Lamm and colleagues at the West Virginia University School of Medicine, found that “megadoses” of multiple vitamins resulted in a nearly 50% lower cancer recurrence rate compared to supplementing with the RDA levels of those same nutrients.
Findings like these have seemed promising enough to attract the attention of the NIH, which subsequently invested hundreds of millions of dollars in an attempt to determine whether vitamins or antioxidant supplements could help ward off heart attacks, strokes, cancer, and other major diseases. When these large, expensive studies failed to show any difference in these problems between the vitamin and placebo groups, the media announced that people should not take these supplements. But again, because the science was being presented in a simplistic or “sound byte” fashion, a great deal of critical information was lost in translation. For example, what doses were used in these studies? Which forms of nutrients were chosen? Was adherence to the supplement regimen carefully monitored? And is it possible that certain combinations of nutrients are needed to see a beneficial effect?
The Single-Nutrient Fallacy
Among the fundamental errors made in most vitamin studies to date is to assume that one can study a single nutrient and see a real, measurable health benefit. But we’ve known for decades that multiple nutrients are far more effective than single nutrients—just as multiple nutrients are found in food, one cannot take a single nutrient and expect to see favorable results. Our human evolutionary mandate is to receive our nutrition much as we would from food—that is, presenting the nutrients to the body in combinations rather than as single nutrients in isolation. And it’s not just micronutrients (vitamins and minerals), but also the thousands of plant-derived nutrients, or phytonutrients, that are needed to ensure that a “vitamin supplement” is going to work well in the body.
Nutrition scientist Lester Packer of the University of California at Berkeley was among the first to drive home the importance of this perspective. Dr. Packer views the interactions between antioxidant vitamins as a kind of “network”, with each vitamin’s activities complementing and reinforcing those of the other vitamins. When antioxidants encounter powerful free radicals and neutralize them, they themselves become weak oxidants and can then be neutralized or recycled by other antioxidants. The end result of combining antioxidants, then, is to minimize the generation of oxidants and create a high degree of antioxidant power. The so-called “network” effect may be critical to the success of vitamin studies, and yet, because vitamins have been viewed in the same way as drugs, they continue to be studied in isolation.
Incidentally, we also know that the activities of the fat-soluble supplements (e.g., vitamins A and E) tend to complement and reinforce those of the water-soluble supplements (e.g., vitamins C and B-Complex), affording superior protection against oxidative stress when compared to either group of antioxidants alone. The trick is in figuring out which combinations of nutrients are ideal for a particular individual, based on their biochemistry and other factors.
Similarly, it’s important to understand that a supplement is literally a supplement, not a substitution for healthy eating. None of the negative vitamin studies have bothered to try to improve the diets people were consuming. And yet, a poor or imbalanced diet can sabotage any supplement regimen, and many people take supplements thinking that they can just go ahead and continue eating in ways that actually promote disease. We know from first-hand experience that a junk food diet can totally nullify the benefits of supplements. This is why I strongly advocate an individualized clinical approach with a whole foods dietary program at the foundation, supplementing with multiple nutrients and bioactive factors.
Even when multiple nutrients are studied—as in the clinical trials of multivitamins— there can be serious flaws in the way the study is carried out. As a case in point, consider the recent study published in the 9 February 2009 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine. This eight-year study included 161,808 postmenopausal women, making it the largest study ever of older women taking multivitamins. Based on the findings, the researchers claimed that multivitamins were useless in preventing cancer and cardiovascular disease in women.
Despite the media’s gleeful announcement that this study “proved” the ineffectiveness of supplements, the researchers never actually monitored what the women were taking during the study period. It’s quite likely that most were taking cheap, synthetic vitamins. In addition, however, there was no measurement of how often the women actually took their vitamins -- or indeed whether they were taking them at all. Because this massive study never actually measured the effects of multivitamins, its conclusions can only be considered misleading and unfounded – in short one of the worst examples of junk science we have to date.
Other Flaws in the Research Fabric
There are many other problems in the way vitamin studies are conducted these days. For example, many of the faulty studies have used dosages well below the amount shown in earlier vitamin studies to be effective in preventing heart disease, cancer and other conditions. If an individual lacks a particular nutrient, she will likely benefit from initially taking a larger dose of that particular nutrient for repletion purposes. Similarly, if an individual suffers from malabsorption and other digestive weaknesses, or if the body is overloaded with mercury, lead or other toxic metals, she will be unable to benefit from even fairly substantial doses of the supplement.
Along these lines, these large studies never take you, the individual, into consideration. Unless you individually tailor your supplement regimen, many supplements are just a waste of money. Our clinical experience at the Raleigh-based Carolina Center for Integrative Medicine attests to the power of using sophisticated testing to tailor dietary supplement regimens. Unless you actually measure what the body needs -- or what the specific nutrient deficiencies are -- you are shooting in the dark and missing the biological targets that would otherwise engender health and vitality.
Sensational reporting on the “vitamins don’t work” theme can be very effective in discouraging the public from taking these micronutrients. But the conclusions from the best research to date should instead be a call to the FDA to help improve the quality of research on dietary supplements, to urge an individually tailored approach to supplementation, to improve the quality of dietary supplements, and to increase the recommended dose of vitamins to the level that is known to be effective for those individuals who are deficient.
To reach Dr. Pittman, or to obtain more information on how to individualize and optimize your nutritional support through the use of diet and supplements, contact the Carolina Center for Integrative Medicine in Raleigh, NC at 919-571-4391, or visit the website at carolinacenter.com.
Dr. Pittman,
It is indeed encouraging to hear yet another physician admit to, and print the real story about dietary supplements. As the old saying goes: "The proof is in the pudding" is certainly apropos here. Why then is the dietary supplement industry rapidly approaching the mega-pharmaceutical industry; with much less complications I might add?
Posted by: Clinton M. Blumer | September 03, 2009 at 08:39 AM
well done for stating some of the facts.
Posted by: Ralph Quinlan Forde | September 24, 2009 at 04:55 PM
Dr. Pittman,
Your blog "Selling the Vitamins don't Work Myth" is 100% correct. I recently wrote a blog about the confusion that professional and lay people face when reading the literature on Vitamin E. My blog can be found at
http://www.metametrixinstitute.org/post/2009/10/09/Whats-Up-with-Vitamin-E.aspx.
My best advice is too always check to see what form of Vitamin E was used in any Vitamin E study. If the study did not use mixed tocopherols, then the study was not a Vitamin E study, only an alpha-tocopherol study.
Thaks for a great blog.
Posted by: Robert M David Ph.D. | October 12, 2009 at 11:48 AM
wow thanks for this great information
is good article I dint think about that
thanks
Posted by: Aloha Rentals | November 10, 2009 at 06:24 AM
Information about nutrition vitamins, vitamin supplements, health minerals. Learn about the function of vitamins and minerals in the human body and the foods they can be found it.
Posted by: Vitamin C | November 15, 2009 at 11:17 PM
I am pleased to say it is interesting that this blog has a great variety of viewpoints to better understand the topic Interesting post because many people ignore this information so important
and clear. thanks
Eli
Posted by: Skin Removal | November 17, 2009 at 02:17 PM
Hi...
That is a nice post indeed. I liked your way of presenting the ideas. Good job. Keep it up!
-Orpin
Posted by: orpin rose | December 18, 2009 at 09:16 PM
Well, you can initially verify if the supplements you're taking is giving an effect. You may know it right after many days. What I just notice is different body needs different supplements.
-jr
Posted by: health food antioxidant supplements | April 21, 2010 at 09:23 AM
I was reading other articles about “Vitamins Don’t Work” Myth, and yours is the one with the most interesting info. Thanks for sharing and have a nice day.
Posted by: generic viagra | May 03, 2010 at 12:05 PM
The newspapers and media print biased stories against nutritional supplements because the media depends on advertising revenue from the drug companies. The media will therefore run stories which are negative for vitamins and supplements, which in comparison makes the drug ads look good. The reality is that by and large, vitamins are safe, and drugs are dangerous. Adverse effects from drugs cause 140,000 deaths annually. On the other hand, there were no reported deaths last year from taking vitamins.
For More: http://jeffreydach.com/2007/05/05/vitaminsjeffrey-dachdrdach.aspx
jeffrey dach md
Posted by: Jeffrey Dach MD | May 06, 2010 at 05:04 AM
I have heard as you indicated there is variations in different vitamins. I think that is lost in the press. I was also heard certain vitamins and minerals ( especially liquid) are more aborabed by the body. Also that most vitamins and minerals contain Gluten and most people are allergic to them.
Posted by: Kanishka Lal | July 05, 2010 at 09:24 AM
You claim that there is a disconnect between savings and investment. That may occur in monetary terms, but not in capital terms. This does not imply that a commensurate amount of capital is siting idle. It instead means that those whose cash is not idle have a greater purchasing power. Thanks
Posted by: guanacaste costa rica | July 17, 2010 at 05:58 PM
Let's write that letter we thought of writing "one of these days"! Remove from your vocabulary phrases like"one of these days"or "someday";
Posted by: discount coach | July 26, 2010 at 07:31 PM
Thank you Dr Pittman.
It makes a nice change to see someone in your position come out and support vitamin supplementation in it's various forms.
For far too long have the general public been influenced by their GP's who are manipulated by the many drug companies pushing their product.
Sure - many of the drugs we take serve a critical need but some cause major side effects and health issues.
Great article. Thanks.
Posted by: Peter | July 30, 2010 at 02:43 AM
I found your article about about nutrition, vitamins, and vitamin supplements quite revelatory and i learned a lot. Do you think, health teas like http://www.tavateabenefits.com/tava-tea-weight-loss are similar.
Posted by: tava tea weight loss | July 31, 2010 at 06:45 PM
The fact that they are called supplements means that they supplement nutrients that we lack in our body. In most cases, we take some form of dietary supplement. When we choose our nutritional supplements, it is best to use only those products that list actual foods as their ingredients rather than synthetic and isolated vitamins.
Posted by: crib baby | August 04, 2010 at 02:35 PM
Great news topic I feel very bad when I heard this news. How such type of incidents happen in airlines only. Why the have not taken proper measures to stop such nonsense event. A quick question, if you want to participate in your challenges, do we have to use Prima products ... I don't have any yet, and sure would like to play along for a chance to win some...?
Posted by: viagra online | August 14, 2010 at 12:04 PM
I would like to live to study, and not study to live.
Posted by: Jordan 5 | August 22, 2010 at 10:02 PM
I am agree with the importance of vitamins to our body. It is very important but getting vitamins from tablets and natural vitamins obtain from food is totally different so try to avoid vitamins tablet as it creates problems in future life.
If your condition is very bad means you are suffering from some health problems at that time it is very necessary to take vitamins.
There are few vitamins which is water soluble you can use it that time as it will not harm at your body.
Best Regards
Smith Alan
Posted by: generic viagra without prescription | September 21, 2010 at 04:53 AM
There are several reasons why you should have vitamin and nutritional supplements to cope with living today. Consuming vitamin supplements when necessary is a good technique of optimizing your dietary sources of nutrients.
Posted by: VITAMINS | October 02, 2010 at 07:48 AM
Hi,i'm from Italy and i love to discover new blogs and sites. Thanks for your articles. To Your Success
Posted by: Max Italy | October 20, 2010 at 08:42 AM
Proper nutrition should be given to the children at the proper age.At the same tine proper food is also main.
Posted by: Recepti | October 22, 2010 at 01:18 AM
What would private (health) drug industries do to overcome the first ever contraction of global economy ?
Posted by: long island swimming pools | November 03, 2010 at 11:11 PM
Health is the general condition of a person in all aspects. It is also a level of functional and/or metabolic efficiency of an organism, often implicitly human.
Posted by: new york payroll | November 03, 2010 at 11:12 PM
Interesting post. Not sure I agree 100% though. I think that vitamin supplements should be regulated with the same rigor as over the counter medicines.
Posted by: bigkahuna | November 06, 2010 at 12:24 PM