Thursday, February 4, 2010

Treat vitamins as over-the-counter drugs: doctors

Vitamins and supplements are dangerous. Not to your health; to their profits. Wrap your head around this fact and never let go of it: the medical industrial complex has no interest in keeping you healthy. None. Zero. Zilch. Nada. Oh your doctor might think he's applying the best in modern medicine to keep you healthy and well, but that's only because he doesn't realize he hasn't been trained in real medicine, real healing, but in fact is nothing more than a over-qualified, overpaid drug pusher for big pharma.

No, it's not about health. It's profits. And if you're healthy, you're of no use to them. You have zero profitability. None. You're worthless. So thus, anything outside of the quackery that passes for medicine that can keep you well, keep your body functioning and strong, must be cast as dangerous, as poisonous, and must be regulated. And you start seeing things like Codex Alimentarius, which would regulate vitamins and supplements to the point of uselessness - for instance a daily Vitamin D allowance of 5iu/day, when in fact you need well over a thousand international units a day (I take 5,000iu; your body will make 20,000iu after a good day in the sun (which is why you don't get sick in the summer)).

This is the agenda. Can you overdose on vitamins? Sure. You can overdose on oxygen, or water. This is a stepping stone to Codex. Do not let them facilitate this genocide by taking away our ability to keep healthy.

National Post -

With Health Canada poised to let food makers fortify a wide range of new products with vitamins and other nutrients, a group of leading emergency-department doctors is calling for vitamins to be treated like over-the-counter drugs because of their potentially dangerous side effects.

The physicians from children's hospitals in British Columbia, Alberta and Ontario also recommend that vitamin A no longer be allowed as an ingredient in multivitamins, citing evidence that it can cause birth defects in high doses.

The researchers stress that vitamins are generally safe and healthy when consumed appropriately. But with many Canadians convinced that taking large quantities of certain supplements can stave off various medical problems, the doctors caution that the public needs to know more about the downsides of high doses or improper chronic use.

Those effects range from liver damage caused by too much vitamin A to hardening of the arteries linked to vitamin C, the physicians outline in a paper just published in The Annals of Pharmacotherapy. Some can also interact riskily with other drugs, undermining blood-clotting ability, for instance, when combined with the popular painkiller Ibuprofen.

"We don't want to wait for something bad to happen," said Dr. Ran Goldman, head of emergency at the B.C. Children's Hospital and the study's lead author.

The doctors take aim as well at a proposal being considered by Health Canada to give food manufacturers freedom to fortify a wide range of products, including snack foods and pop, with vitamins and other nutrients. A department official reiterated in a recent letter that the government is moving toward the change.

The idea is "unacceptable," given the already high consumption of vitamins in society, the emergency physicians say.

Health Canada, though, says that it has serious concerns about their study and how it portrays regulation of vitamins. In fact, the nutrients are covered by the government's new natural-health products rules, and they require substances to undergo assessment before being approved and to carry detailed side-effect information, the department said in an email response to questions.

The doctors suggest the five-year-old natural-health regulations are not appropriately stringent for products such as vitamins. Heather Boon, a pharmacy professor at the University of Toronto who studies natural-health products, said that is not true, though she noted that spotty application of the regulations so far means safety labelling of vitamins now varies from product to product.

"The problem is that people think vitamins and they automatically think 'They must be good for you, and more must be better,' and that's when people get into trouble," she said. "

We need to be conscious that if you take too much, you could run into trouble."

Carl Carter, regulatory affairs chief at the Canadian Health Food Association, said consumers should be better informed about vitamins -- because of their benefits.

"Canadians are underexposed to vitamin D, particularly in the winter months," he said. "From a safety point of view, there could be as much as a 70% reduction in the risk of cancer through the appropriate use of vitamin D."

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1 comment:

  1. Interesting post to know several information. Vitamins can be fascinated from numerous food sources, but are particularly profuse in fruits and vegetables. A vitamin supplement is intended to offer the human body with all the necessary nutrients it needs. A vitamin supplement can assist people prevent both mineral and vitamin deficiencies.

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