How Dietary Supplements Can Save You
Thousands!
By Mark Hyman, M.D.
It's cheap, painless and can reduce this
country's healthcare spending by $24 billion over five years. What
am I talking about? It's not the latest medical invention or drug.
Nope, it's supplements.
According to exciting research from the Lewin Group,
spending just a few cents a day on some key nutritional supplements
can significantly decrease chronic illness as well as
healthcare costs. Using strict criteria, the Lewin Group analyzed
scientific studies on nutritional supplements, then used our
government's own accounting techniques to determine their economic impact.
They looked only at Medicare recipients and
women of childbearing age, and only at supplements that have been
proven to help beyond any scientific doubt:
1. Calcium and vitamin D for osteoporosis
2. Folic acid for prevention of birth defects
3. Omega-3 fatty acids for heart disease
4. Lutein and zeaxanthin for prevention of major
age related blindness, or macular degeneration
Let's start with calcium and vitamin D.
First, the Lewin Group study used older research. Newer studies
suggest that higher doses of vitamin D3 (1,000 to 2,000 IU daily),
may be even more helpful. But even with that older data, the
researchers found that giving older people 1,200 mg of calcium and
400 IU of vitamin D a day would decrease bone loss and hip
fractures. They estimated these supplements could prevent more than
776,000 hospitalizations for hip fractures over five years, saving
$16.1 billion.
Next let's look at omega-3 fats. Among other benefits,
omega-3 fatty acids help prevent cardiac arrhythmias, improve
cell membrane function, reduce inflammation, and lower cholesterol
and blood pressure. According to the Lewin Group, giving about
1,800 mg of omega-3 fats a day to Medicare aged people could
prevent 374,000 hospitalizations from heart disease over five years
and save $3.2 billion.
They also estimated the economic effects of
lutein and zeaxanthin, carotenoids found in yellow and orange
vegetables. 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. They found that
taking 6 to 10 mg of supplemental lutein and zeaxanthin daily would
help 190,000 individuals avoid dependent care as a result of macular
degeneration. The savings? $3.6 billion over five years.
Finally, the Lewin Group looked at folic
acid. If 11.3 million women began taking just 400 mcg daily of this
vitamin before getting pregnant, we could prevent birth defects in
600 babies, saving $1.4 billion over five years. These four
supplements could create a combined savings of $24 billion over five years.
Yet the typical American diet often doesn't
contain the necessary amount of these nutrients, putting us at
higher risk for the problems mentioned above. In fact, the majority
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. That's not even the amount often
needed for optimal health and to prevent conditions like blindness,
osteoporosis, heart disease, cancer, diabetes, and dementia. That's
why I firmly believe we should all take certain nutritional
supplements.
These recommendations are supported by
mainstream medical journals (1, 2). Here is the regimen I recommend
for everyone:
1. A high quality multivitamin and
mineral that contains mixed carotenoids (including lutein and
zeaxanthin), 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. Choose calcium citrate or chelated
versions of minerals, not calcium carbonate or magnesium oxide,
which 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.
This
regimen is relatively inexpensive, risk free and the benefits
are enormous. You'll have better immune function, brain function,
and higher energy and will also prevent many future health problems. I
think that's worth it.
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.
Mark Hyman, MD is a pioneer in
functional medicine, practicing physician and best-selling author. A
sneak preview of his book "The UltraSimple Diet" is available.
See The
UltraWellness Blog for more on Nutritional
Supplements
Copyright 2004 Yoursite.com. Template provided by Interspire.com
|