And when the alternative health sellers describe their commercial product as "the treatment they do not want you to know about", it's just mind-manipulating advertising pure and simple, alluding to notions of suppressed or secret knowledge, which piques people's interest.
DSMO comes to mind. When I finally got my only root-canal treated tooth extracted - done against my explicit disconsent 2 years before the outbreak of my multiple chronic disease - I was prescribed a precautionary antibiotic. To not disturb my beautiful gut-flora I used DSMO mouthwash instead, and already the next day I would go with my toungh on a search for the gap, because I couln't feel where, nor any pain from then on.
There simply isn't that much need for science to prove natural things work (not everything for everyone, but that's to be expected), due to the effects for which one is taking them. They are ether there or not, and one always knows that way. And come on, a bottle of DSMO costs nothing.
supplements industry brings in, $140 billion a year
Now you exaggerate badly.
Industry
In 2015, the American market for dietary supplements was valued at $37 billion,
[4] with the
economic impact in the United States for 2016 estimated at $122 billion, including employment wages and taxes.
[70] One 2016 analysis estimated the total market for dietary supplements could reach $278 billion worldwide by 2024.
[71]
Clicking on the reference for the estimation of $122 billion, I landed on a website with popups welcoming me to having won a price! How scientific such a websites as reference?
In fact, usually I've seen estimates that the statin industry
alone is worth the $37 billion equal to the supplement industry.
And wikipedia again:
In 2011, global spending on prescription drugs topped $954 billion, even as growth slowed somewhat in Europe and North America.
Not counting wages, infrastructures, hospitals, the high cost of just one night sleep in a hospital, surgeries... etc.
The Centers for
Medicare and
Medicaid (CMS) reported that U.S.
health care costs rose 5.8% to reach $3.2 trillion in 2015, or $9,990 per person.
[3]
Trillions my friend. Not the meager $37 billions as with supplements.
So why doesn't the supplement industry spend money on a clinical trial of supplements like these, to see whether they can reduce heart attacks. If they could, they'd probably be safer and better tolerated than the pharma drugs.
Simply. A clinical trial to get any remedy, natural or synthetic approved, costs:
If the cost of these failed drugs is taken into account, the cost of developing a successful new drug (
new chemical entity, or NCE), has been estimated at about US$1.3 billion
[77]
Therefore from the $40 billion market of supplements divited by many more competitors, which single one could afford? I guess only someone like LifeExtension could, they even do sponsor small trials. But for clinical approval trial costs, even they are too lightweight. And if the did? Everyone of the 100s competitors would produce a product with similiar ingredients, without having to stem the incredible amount needed for approval. LifeExtension would go bankrupt.
But on the other hand we have to be glad about all that. Because once any substance becomes prescription the price rises, and is in fact no more available over the counter without a MDs visit. Like it for example happened to pyridoxamine in the US. The only MDs who in my country would prescribe naturals, costs about €80 per consultation and prescription. For picking up any prescribtion from the pharmacy, in my country I would have to pay an additional €5 'prescription fee'. So instead of now €5 for a bottle of magnesium, €85 instead?
Therefore as long as it is that way, I actually have to be glad that vitamin C, D, K2, magnesium, omega-3 and CoQ10 are scientifically not valitated as effective in synergy for CVD (to mention the most important), and available over the counter. Because in such a case I couldn't have afforted and couldn't report about remissions. The prediction of my MDs probably having come true, and me death already long ago.