Posted on 09/08/2014 6:59:46 PM PDT by LibWhacker
If you are taking vitamins, there is a good chance that they were imported from China.
An aging population and growing focus on health in the United States has fueled the growth of a $28 billion vitamin and nutritional supplement market, and it is expected to continue to grow at about 3 percent a year.
Over half of American adults are popping vitamins and supplements. They may not be aware they are eating products made in China, or made using raw materials from China.
China has captured over 90 percent of the Vitamin C market in the United States, according to the Seattle Times. Think about how many labels advertise added Vitamin C. Vitamin C goes into many food and drink productsalmost all processed food for humans as well as pets contains Vitamin C.
The consumer has no way of knowing the added vitamin C comes from China, because there is no rule requiring labeling the country of origin for ingredients.
This may raise quite a few eyebrows as Chinese food safety scandals make headlines every day.
Here are five facts any consumer of vitamins should know.
1. Only 2 percent of all imported vitamins and other supplements are inspected. Why? Vitamins and supplements are classified as food by law and therefore not subject to the tough regulatory scrutiny of prescription drugs.
2. Chinas top vitamin and supplement production areas are among the most polluted in the country (and thus in the world).
Vitamins and nutritional supplements usually use agricultural products as key raw materials. The top vitamin exporting province, Zhejiang, has an alarming level of soil pollution from heavy metal. As matter of fact, one-sixth of Chinas farmlands are heavily polluted.
For example, rice planted in several key agricultural provinces was reported to contain excessive Cadmium, a metal commonly found in batteries, coloring, and the industrial waste from making plastic. It may cause serious kidney disease.
Irrigation water is a nightmare: Half of the countrys major water bodies are polluted, as are 86 percent of city water bodies. Pollution is largely caused by the countrys numerous factories, which rarely have equipment for treating pollution. Seventy to 80 percent of the countrys industrial waste is directly emitted into rivers.
3. Even those labeled as organic are not safe, since USDA organic standards place no limit on levels of heavy metal contamination for certified organic foods.
4. Approximately 6,300 Americans nationwide complained about adverse reactions to dietary supplements between 2008 and 2012, according to FDA statistics. But the actual number may be more than eight times higher, some experts say, because most people dont believe health products can make them sick. While not all such problems would be caused by pollution in China, that pollution may have played a role.
5. Worst of all, China-made vitamins are everywhere, and even those who do not consume vitamins and supplements can hardly escape. Many vitamins end up as ingredients in items like soft drinks, food, animal feed, and even cosmetics.
My Dr. noted that there is not a single double blind scientific study ever performed that show vitamin supplements do a damn thing.
Yep and Ive always made certain that the supplements I use arent made in China..or India...et.
http://www.solgar.com/AboutSolgar/SolgarsGlobalManufacturing.htm
Worst of all they don’t do a damn thing except give users expensive pee.
To help though, here's a link...
YThis is a matter I took up with Trader Joe’s too.
Did he tell you how many people die each year from Tylenol?
>>Your doctor assumes that the only kind of evidence is a “double blind research study,” which of course it is not.<<
Well, we talked about more than that single approach (although it is the gold standard).
Your link basically boils down to: Not demonstrably helpful, but not harmful either.
>>Did he tell you how many people die each year from Tylenol?<<
What does that have to do with the fact supplements are pointless?
The fact that supplements kill fewer people than the FDA approved crap.
Vitamin D supplements are very important for people who can’t get it from the sun.
>>The fact that supplements kill fewer people than the FDA approved crap.<<
Still not seeing it.
Supplements may be benign (at best) but they do nothing.
Active medications can have all sorts of side effects. Things that do nothing — do nothing.
And who brought up the FDA? Not I...
Thanks for that link.
>>Vitamin D supplements are very important for people who cant get it from the sun<<
They don’t work. You need the sunlight.
The point is that most doctors aren’t up to date on medical research. Further, they get no kick backs on vitamins. They do on drugs. You doc is probably FOS.
>>Thanks for that link.<<
Why? It doesn’t say anything except “mostly harmless.”
>>The point is that most doctors arent up to date on medical research. Further, they get no kick backs on vitamins. They do on drugs. You doc is probably FOS.<<
OK, point me to a rigorous scientific study that proves supplement efficacy.
I’ll wait (this will be a long wait).
And, of course, there are no country of orgin labeling requirements to inform consumers where the actual nutrients in their supplements were produced.
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