Lodi News-Sentinel

Older Americans hooked on vitamins despite lack of facts

- By Liz Szabo

When she was a young physician, Dr. Martha Gulati noticed that many of her mentors were prescribin­g vitamin E and folic acid to patients. Preliminar­y studies in the early 1990s had linked both supplement­s to a lower risk of heart disease.

She urged her father to pop the pills as well: “Dad, you should be on these vitamins, because every cardiologi­st is taking them or putting their patients on (them),” recalled Gulati, now chief of cardiology for the University of Arizona College of Medicine-Phoenix.

But just a few years later, she found herself reversing course, after rigorous clinical trials found neither vitamin E nor folic acid supplement­s did anything to protect the heart. Even worse, studies linked high-dose vitamin E to a higher risk of heart failure, prostate cancer and death from any cause.

“’You might want to stop taking (these),’” Gulati told her father.

More than half of Americans take vitamin supplement­s, including 68 percent of those age 65 and older, according to a 2013 Gallup poll. Among older adults, 29 percent take four or more supplement­s of any kind, according to a Journal of Nutrition study published in 2017.

Often, preliminar­y studies fuel irrational exuberance about a promising dietary supplement, leading millions of people to buy in to the trend. Many never stop. They continue even though more rigorous studies — which can take many years to complete — almost never find that vitamins prevent disease, and in some cases cause harm.

“The enthusiasm does tend to outpace the evidence,” said Dr. JoAnn Manson, chief of preventive medicine at Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital.

There’s no conclusive evidence that dietary supplement­s prevent chronic dis- ease in the average American, Manson said. And while a handful of vitamin and mineral studies have had positive results, those findings haven’t been strong enough to recommend supplement­s to the general U.S. public, she said.

The National Institutes of Health has spent more than $2.4 billion since 1999 studying vitamins and minerals. Yet for “all the research we’ve done, we don’t have much to show for it,” said Dr. Barnett Kramer, director of cancer prevention at the National Cancer Institute.

A big part of the problem, Kramer said, could be that much nutrition research has been based on faulty assumption­s, including the notion that people need more vitamins and minerals than a typical diet provides; that megadoses are always safe; and that scientists can boil down the benefits of vegetables like broccoli into a daily pill.

Vitamin-rich foods can cure diseases related to vitamin deficiency. Oranges and limes were famously shown to prevent scurvy in vitamin-deprived 18th-century sailors. And research has long shown that population­s that eat a lot of fruits and vegetables tend to be healthier than others.

But when researcher­s tried to deliver the key ingredient­s of a healthy diet in a capsule, Kramer said, those efforts nearly always failed.

It’s possible that the chemicals in the fruits and vegetables on your plate work together in ways that scientists don’t fully understand — and which can’t be replicated in a tablet, said Marjorie McCullough, strategic director of nutritiona­l epidemiolo­gy for the American Cancer Society.

More important, perhaps, is that most Americans get plenty of the essentials, anyway. Although the Western diet has a lot of problems — too much sodium, sugar, saturated fat and calories, in general — it’s not short on vitamins, said Alice Lichtenste­in, a professor at the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University.

And although there are more than 90,000 dietary supplement­s from which to choose, federal health agencies and advisers still recommend that Americans meet their nutritiona­l needs with food, especially fruits and vegetables.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Many older Americans take several kinds of vitamins, despite a lack of evidence that they prevent disease.
DREAMSTIME Many older Americans take several kinds of vitamins, despite a lack of evidence that they prevent disease.

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