How Dietary Supplements Can Save You Thousands

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Spending just pennies a day on healthcare can reduce our expenditures by $24 billion over five years.

Sound crazy? It’s true.

New research from the Lewin Group has shown that spending pennies a day on a few key nutritional supplements can dramatically reduce sickness and chronic disease -- and greatly decrease healthcare expenditures as a result.

How did they come to this conclusion? And why haven’t we heard about it?

The Lewin Group looked only at rigorous scientific studies that documented the benefits of nutritional supplements. They used the Congressional Budget Office’s accounting methods to determine the economic impact of supplements. And they kept their analysis specifically to Medicare patients and women of childbearing age.

Although nutritional therapies can help a broad range of illnesses, the group only looked at four supplements and disease combinations because of the rigor and validity of the scientific evidence available for these nutrients and diseases.

While there are many other beneficial nutritional therapies that have been proven helpful in studies, the ones in this particular study are only those that are unquestionable, beyond scientific doubt, well-accepted, and proven to help.

Yet they are also under-used and not generally recommended by healthcare providers.

The study looked at:

  1. Calcium and vitamin D and their effect on osteoporosis
  2. Folic acid and its ability to prevent birth defects
  3. Omega-3 fatty acids and their benefits for heart disease
  4. Lutein and zeaxanthin and their benefit in preventing major age-related blindness, or macular degeneration

Let me review these in more detail.

Most of us hear the refrain from our physicians that nutritional supplements just produce expensive urine, that you do not know what you are getting, or that there is no scientific proof to support their claims.

My advice to these doctors is to do their scientific homework.

Let’s start by looking at calcium and vitamin D.

First, I want to point out the vitamin D research referred to in The Lewin Group study is older research. Newer research, as I have discussed in my vitamin D blogs, suggests that higher doses of vitamin D3, such as 1,000 to 2,000 IU a day, have even greater benefit.

Based on that older research, the study’s authors determined that providing Medicare-age citizens with 1,200 mg of calcium and 400 IU of vitamin D would result in reduced bone loss and fewer hip fractures. The researchers estimated these supplements could prevent more than 776,000 hospitalizations for hip fractures over five years and save $16.1 billion.

Next let’s look at omega-3 fats. Omega-3 fatty acids help prevent cardiac arrhythmias, improve cell membrane function, reduce inflammation, lower cholesterol and blood pressure, and have many other benefits.

The Lewin Group found that giving the Medicare population about 1,800 mg of omega-3 fats a day would prevent 374,000 hospitalizations from heart disease over five years. The Medicare savings from reduced hospital and physician expenses would be $3.2 billion.

This is pretty convincing data, but it doesn’t stop there. The Lewin Group also analyzed the economic effects of lutein and zeaxanthin.

Lutein and zeaxanthin are carotenoids that are found in yellow and orange vegetables. I recommend taking them in combination with the hundreds of other carotenoids found in yellow and orange foods.

Taken as supplements, these have been shown to treat macular degeneration, which is the loss of central vision, a major reason people over age 65 require nursing home care.

The study found that taking 6 to 10 mg of lutein and zeaxanthin daily would help 190,000 individuals avoid dependent care and would result in $3.6 billion in savings over five years.

Lastly the Lewin Group looked at the effects of taking folic acid. 44 million women of childbearing age are not taking folic acid.

If only 11.3 million of them began taking just 400 mcg of folic acid on a daily basis before conception, we could prevent birth defects called neural tube defects in 600 babies and save $344,700,000 in lifetime healthcare costs for these children. Over 5 years, this would account for $1.4 billion in savings.

Taken together, these four simple interventions, which cost pennies a day, could produce a combined savings of $24 billion over five years. This does not even include benefits to people younger than 65 or any of the other benefits of nutritional supplementation, such as improved immunity, cognitive function, and mood.

In this study, the researchers were extremely strict and only looked at nutrient interventions that met three criteria.

  1. The supplement had to produce a measurable physiological effect.
  2. This physiological effect had to create a change in health status.
  3. The researchers only looked at health problems where a change in health status is associated with a decrease in healthcare expenditures.

The Lewin Group’s study is intriguing. The economic impact of investing a few pennies a day in nutritional supplements is compelling.

But what’s downright frightening is that studies by the US Department of Health and Human Services prove that the typical American diet does not always provide a sufficient level of vitamins and minerals – meaning we are at greater risk for conditions like those outlined above.

Because of our consumption of low-nutrient, high-calorie foods that are highly processed, hybridized, genetically modified, shipped long distances, and grown in nutrient-depleted soils, many of us are nutritionally depleted.

In fact, a whopping 92 percent of us are deficient in one or more nutrients at the Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA) level, which is the minimum amount necessary to prevent deficiency diseases like rickets or scurvy -- diseases that are the result of not getting enough vitamins and minerals. The RDA standards do not necessarily outline the amount needed for optimal health.

What’s more, our government’s nutrient guidelines ignore the fact that many Americans, because of genetic variations and unique needs, may need higher doses of vitamins and minerals than the RDA.

Vitamin deficiency does not cause acute diseases such as scurvy or rickets, but they do cause what have been called “long-latency deficiency diseases.” These include conditions like blindness, osteoporosis, heart disease, cancer, diabetes, dementia, and more.

What all this adds up to is clear.

Nutritional supplements do not just make expensive urine.

Based on mounting evidence and confirmed by the Journal of the American Medical Association (1) and The New England Journal of Medicine (2), I strongly believe that we should all be taking certain basic supplements.

Here are the supplements I recommend for everyone:

  1. A high-quality multivitamin and mineral. The multivitamin should contain mixed carotenoids, which include lutein and zeaxanthin as part of their mix, as well as at least 400 mcg of folate and a mixed B-complex vitamin.
  2. Calcium-magnesium with at least 600 mg of calcium and 400 mg of magnesium. The calcium should be calcium citrate or chelated versions of minerals. Do not use calcium carbonate or magnesium oxide, which are cheap minerals that are poorly absorbed.
  3. Vitamin D3, 1,000 to 2,000 IU a day (people who are deficient in vitamin D will need more).
  4. Omega-3 fatty acids that contain the fats EPA and DHA, 1,000 to 2,000 mg a day.

The cost is low, the benefit is high, and the risk is non-existent for these nutritional supplements. Not only will you feel better, have better immune function, and improve your energy and brain function, but you will also prevent many problems down the road.

So, eat a healthy diet -- and take your nutritional supplements every day.

Now I’d like to hear from you…

What supplements do you take every day?

How does your doctor feel about nutritional supplements?

Which of these nutrients do you typically get from your diet?

Please let me know your thoughts by leaving a comment.

To your good health,

Mark Hyman, M.D.

P.S. For more information on this and other blogs, please go to http://www.ultrawellness.com/blog.

REFERENCES:

(1) Fairfield KM, Fletcher RH. Vitamins for Chronic Disease Prevention in Adults: Scientific Review. JAMA 287: 3116-3126.

(2) Willett WC, Stampfer MJ. What Vitamins Should I Be Taking, Doctor? N Engl J Med 345:1819.

 

i am convinced about using dietary supplements. i use ground hemp seed (THC free), it has omegas 3,6,and 9. makes a great shake to start the day off with. fish oil, liquid coral calcium, coq10, vitamin E, vitamin C w/bioflavenoids, organic coconut oil, and an organic liquid multi-vitamin are part of my day. i have beat HBP and arthritis using supplements and avoiding "BAD" ingredients in food.

by reddog at 08:09 PM on 04/10/08

This is probably not the right place to ask the question but I couldn't seem to find the right place. I have lost 4 poounds on Phase 1 of the Ultra Metabolism diet and I'm about to move to Phase 2. If I'm comfortable with the foods and recipes on Phase 1 should I stay on it longer rather than moving to Phase 2? Even though I haven't lost many pounds, I've lost almost 2 inches off my waist and hips.

by bonni at 08:53 PM on 04/10/08

Firstly, thank you for the 'informed' information that you provide. Because of this, on the level of layperson , I am becoming quite a channel of information of those within my sphere of influence. And I like this...both that I can quote reasonably authoritively on the subject of the effect of nutrition on health (well at least point people to where the sources of the information came from) while promoting an awareness of the connection between nutrition, health and healthy living. And more importantly the people within my sphere of influence like what I am doing.

Having said this, and in reply to your question about nutrition - whether I know what's in the supplements I take - the truth is no I don't know. However let me describe the circular process of awareness raising and knowledge sharing that is taking place. My dentist/doctor (head of the Stomatology department of a large hospital) prescribed vitamins as part of her initial treatment of my mouth condition (oral lichen plannus). I did ask that she give me a good natural multivitamnin supplement. In my ongoing dentist/doctor/patient relationship and as I receive various advices via your emails I ask her questions about such things as the effect of mercury on the ecology of my mouth and subsequently my health (I pass on the links that you provide in your emails). Also over time I discuss the findings you quote e.g., healthy omega 3 fats. Through our ongoing conversations what I discover I am doing is bringing her scientific information different to her own scientific knowledge. In fact you could say I save her time and also broaden her sources of scientific information.

And does taking the recommended nutritional supplements improve my health? Most certainly it does. In fact I will never stop taking natural supplements because the difference to the health of my mouth (and health in general) is so significant. And who knows, perhaps soon I might find the time to get to know exactly what is in the nutritional supplements I take.

by Cecily at 11:47 PM on 04/10/08

I find it confusing, all the brands, which supplements, etc.  Is there a single souce (e.g, mailorder, is Life Extension a good source?) you can get high quality vitamins along with a list of which specific ones to get (as opposed to spending a long time at the store reading how many mg of this or that on labels and trying to figure out what is best).  So I guess I am looking for a very easy shopping list w/brand names/source which includes the ones everyone should get (a good multi, omega, calcium, etc..)

by ultracor at 06:41 AM on 04/11/08

Dr. Hyman has a great FREE guide for vitamins and supplements online at: http://www.ultrametabolism.com/guide.

He provides his recommended dosages and reputable suppliers.

by MarkWHall at 06:46 PM on 04/11/08

There is a new method now related to a detox treatment. It is called suboxone and it is said to be quite revolutionary. Vitamins can be useful but synthetic vitamins aren't that good compared to natural ones.

by tiberiu at 12:14 PM on 09/25/08

I have many friends who refuse to take dietary supplements because they don’t like to take all sort of drugs. That’s what they say! One thing dietary supplements are not is drugs. A drug, which sometimes can be derived from plants used as traditional medicines, is an article that, among other things, is intended to diagnose, cure, mitigate, treat, or prevent diseases. Another thing dietary supplements are not are replacements for conventional diets, nutritionists say. Supplements do not provide all the known--and perhaps unknown--nutritional benefits of conventional food.

__________________________

Ada - Addiction Treatment

by timada at 10:24 PM on 01/01/09

This is great information and very helpful for myself, but I am wondering about children.  I have a 7 year old son and would like to know what amounts of vitamins should he be getting and is there a multi-vitamin available with the needed levels that he will want to take?

 

by magee at 07:20 AM on 04/11/08

While I try to get most of my vitamins, etc. through my diet, I do use quite a few supplements.  I take a mutlivitamin / multi-mineral, Vitamin C, L-Carnitine, L-Arginine and L-Ornithine combo, and PB8.  Occasionally, I take a full spectrum vitamin E.  I do notice a big difference if I go too long without them.

I love the e-newsletter and the blogs!  Learned a lot.

D

by DebWeb at 09:05 AM on 04/11/08

Along with eating well, of course.Smile

I suffer from endometriosis, but I've found that omega 3's & 6's in the form of black currant oil, vit E, fish oils, flax seeds, and flax seed oils really help control the effects of the disease.  A different weight loss/detox program I'd followed previously had me taking 1 tbsp. flax seed oil, 1 tbsp. fish oil, and 2 tbsp. flax seeds per day.  I'm continuing that dosage along with a high-quality multi-vitamin, biotin, and fiber supplement.  I hope I'm not overdoing the oils especially now that I'm cooking with more olive oil, but it does seem to be helping the endo, and so far I've still lost weight.  I also need to start back on a calcium/magnesium/vit D supplement, as I've had bone density issues in the past.

by Chatoyancy at 10:31 AM on 04/11/08

Other good sources of Omega 3 fatty acids are hemp seed powders and oils (I've replaced olive oil on my salads with hemp seed oil because I prefer the taste), and chia seeds (yes, the source of chia pets).  Chia seeds have a slightly higher concentration of omega 3 oils than flax seeds.  Chia seeds do not attract insects, so they are not sprayed with pesticides.  They don't go rancid like flax seeds, and they don't need to be ground just before eating.

 My best, Motown Slim

by Motown_slim at 04:16 PM on 04/12/08

For some reason, my body always seems to react badly to any kind of Vitamin D3 supplementation -- even in small doses of 400 IU.  I get bad tastes in my mouth, headaches, pain in my tendons and ligaments and muscle weakness.  I have tried all kinds of high-quality brands -- and it is always the same.  And yet my doctor told me last June that my Vitamin D levels were very low.

 Why would this be happening?  Please help.

 Thanks,

Georgia

by Georgia at 10:51 AM on 04/14/08

Are you taking calcium with them? My understanding is we need calcium to absorb the vit d

by cindidwhat at 11:55 AM on 05/01/08

Hello Dr

I am a registered nurse, I have celiac disease and tried your diet and the food. I love the diet I have never felt better and I have lost 15 pounds thank you....  my husband has dropped pounds as well and my sister started this week she too hasn't felt better.

The food I purchased was not so good. If you could please contact me at judith@celiacsolution.com I would like to talk with you about this more privately.

Thank you, Judith

by jemann at 03:51 PM on 04/14/08

Hi.  I have a question for the doctor., or any one else who knows the answer.  I have started taking epsom salts baths twice a week as a detox and as relaxation.   It is my understanding that if you are low on magnesium and sulfates, you will absorb them through your skin.  Is this true, and if it is why dont I see more recomemdations about this.  Since I started doing this my whole body feels warmer and I have more energy for about three days after the hot bath.  I read in your book to take a calcium, magnesium and D supplement.  Can I be getting enough magnesium by the bath?

by cindidwhat at 11:52 AM on 05/01/08

I searched out this blog in particular because I am comparing supplements as recommended by you, Dr. Hyman #1, by Mehmet Oz #2, and by Gary Null, whom you recommended. The latter, however, suggests so many supplements that it is hard to sort them out and decide which to use. I am particularly interested in supplements for mental acuity. Do you have any suggestions in regard to those? Or do you have a blog I could refer to? After my initial 2 week excercise in getting rid of toxins and inflammation I am convinced I am on the right course. It isn't easy, though, with all the information out there, to sort it out or decide what to do. If you have any ideas about how to sort through the information please let me know.

I am a disciple. Judy Erdman

by Melin at 08:47 PM on 08/19/08

Your blog is very much good.
I am very much impressed by your blog content,
i also come across number of sites but your site seems the best....
thanks for the tips...best regard

http://www.thisthatandeverything.com

by vitamins at 10:08 PM on 08/27/08

Well, I find it hard to believe it like answering to the question "How to save your marriage" : have SEX! No, this is not the way!. But, anyway, I speaking for myself, of course. In conclusion I don't agree at all with the idea you stated in this little piece of article.

by andreea123 at 03:09 PM on 10/23/08

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