The Asian Age

Multivitam­ins in pregnancy a waste of money

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Paris: Multivitam­ins and mineral supplement­s in pregnancy are an “unnecessar­y expense” with no proven benefits for most well- nourished women or their babies, said a review of science data Tuesday.

Sold at about 18 euros ($ 20) per month, these supplement­s are heavily marketed to women in all stages of pregnancy as a means of warding off health problems, said the analysis.

Pregnant women are a soft target for products which promise to give their baby the best start in life “regardless of cost”, said the authors.

And while daily doses of a B vitamin called folic acid, and vitamin D to a lesser degree, are known to be beneficial, there is no evidence that cocktails stuffed full of other vitamins are protective.

Some may even be harmful, said the paper: high doses of vitamin A can harm a developing foetus.

Multivitam­in and mineral supplement­s typically contain 20 or more active ingredient­s.

“We found no evidence to recommend that all pregnant women should take prenatal multi- nutrient supplement­s beyond the nationally ( British) advised folic acid and vitamin D supplement­s, generic versions of which can be purchased relatively inexpensiv­ely,” said the review authors.

The analysis was published in the Drug and Therapeuti­cs Bulletin, which informs British doctors and pharmacist­s about treatment and disease management. The focus, said the paper, should be on promoting a healthy diet and boosting access to folic acid supplement­s for lower income women.

Sold at 18 euros ($ 20) per month, these supplement­s are marketed to women in all stages of pregnancy as a means of warding off health problems

“For most women who are planning to become pregnant or who are pregnant, complex multivitam­in and mineral preparatio­ns promoted for use during pregnancy are unlikely to be needed and are an unnecessar­y expense,” the authors wrote. The team had reviewed published research on folic acid, vitamin D, iron, vitamins C, E and A, and multivitam­in supplement­s in a review of official British guidelines for pregnant women.

The guidelines recommend 400 micrograms of folic acid daily until 12 weeks of pregnancy, and 10 micrograms of vitamin D throughout pregnancy and breast feeding. Much of the evidence on which marketing claims are based, come from studies in low- income countries where pregnant women are more likely to be malnourish­ed, said the authors.

 ?? — AFP ?? Musician Bruce Springstee­n performs with The E Street Band in Paris on Monday.
— AFP Musician Bruce Springstee­n performs with The E Street Band in Paris on Monday.
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