Potentially edible! Food woo |
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Fabulous food! |
Delectable diets! |
Bodacious bods! |
A nutritional supplement is a marvelous thing. It can be a vitamin, a food, a random plant extract, a chemical that probably won't actually kill you, or even nothing at all. It can be promoted as medicine only not quite, and isn't sufficiently regulated that you need to actually prove it's effective for anything at all, as long as you don't make any specific health claims.
A handy way to sell them is as vitamins. The churlish might say you were selling pseudovitamins, but they just want to undermine the health freedom of your potential customers.
You can roughly break down the different types of supplements like this:
A study of several commercial nutraceuticals sold as potential health enhancers was tested in mice and reported in 2014. The compounds tested were: Bone Restore®, Juvenon® (lipoic acid and acetyl-L-carnitine), Life Extension Mix®, Ortho Core®, Ortho Mind®, Super K w k2®, Ultra K2®, and a more complex mixture of vitamins, minerals, botanical extracts and nutraceuticals that the researchers themselves prepared. The researchers concluded, "The results are consistent with epidemiological studies suggesting that dietary supplements are not beneficial and even may be harmful for otherwise healthy individuals."[3]
Essentially, drugs are assumed to be unsafe and ineffective until they are clinically proven otherwise, while dietary supplements (because they are classed as food) are assumed to be safe and effective until they are clinically proven otherwise.[4]
Keeping the above in mind, vitamin deficiencies can occur in people (living in a cloudy/low-sun exposure environment can interfere with your vitamin D intake and eating a vegan diet for a lengthy period can make you deficient in vitamin B12). Should you be diagnosed by a qualified physician and prescribed and/or recommended nutritional supplements by one, follow their advice. Self-diagnosing medical conditions can be a risky business; recognize your own bias. Between the dubious nature of the claims often made by the makers of these products, and the questionable quality and quality control, always check the supplement you may be thinking about taking, and always err on the side of caution. With that in mind, the following is a list of websites which monitor the quality of supplements and the claims of their makers.