laura
Senior Member
- Messages
- 108
- Location
- Southern California
Hi Everyone,
I would love get everyone's thoughts on this topic. I recently read a book by author Dan Hurley titled, "Natural Causes: Death, Lies, and Politics in America's Vitamin and Herbal Supplement Industry." It talks about the lack of regulation of the supplement industry as effecting supplements in key ways:
1) Even if a supplement is from a solid, "reliable" company, and has a "good manufacturing seal" or the like, there is no guarantee that you are actually getting what it says on the label. Research the author quotes found that VERY often supplements either did not contain what they claimed or the potency was minimal.
2) Lead and other contaminants have been found in many supplements. The author quotes a situation where Jarrow pulled a gingko supplement off the shelf because lead was found, but only AFTER consumerlab.com (a completely independent private lab) informed them. How many supplements have contaminants because there are no/minimal standards and insufficient testing?!
3) Many supplements out there simply don't work. He cites echinacea and ginkgo biloba, among others, that continue to be sold and promoted despite research showing that they are not effective. We as PWC's know this well, who have spend hundreds of dollars on supplements desperately trying to find something to alleviate our symptoms.
4) Because of the lack of research, misinformation, and lack of regulation, there are supplements that are dangerous, or dangerous for certain people, in certain quantities, but none of this is clear. There is no protection.
5) The supplement industry people have a LOT of power and fight any kind of attempted regulation tooth and nail, playing off the FDA and western medicine as evil.
Is anyone else familiar with this book? I, as do many of us, rely heavily on supplements to alleviate my symptoms and the book scared me. I don't want to waste money, ingest lead, etc.
What do you think?
Thanks,
Laura
I would love get everyone's thoughts on this topic. I recently read a book by author Dan Hurley titled, "Natural Causes: Death, Lies, and Politics in America's Vitamin and Herbal Supplement Industry." It talks about the lack of regulation of the supplement industry as effecting supplements in key ways:
1) Even if a supplement is from a solid, "reliable" company, and has a "good manufacturing seal" or the like, there is no guarantee that you are actually getting what it says on the label. Research the author quotes found that VERY often supplements either did not contain what they claimed or the potency was minimal.
2) Lead and other contaminants have been found in many supplements. The author quotes a situation where Jarrow pulled a gingko supplement off the shelf because lead was found, but only AFTER consumerlab.com (a completely independent private lab) informed them. How many supplements have contaminants because there are no/minimal standards and insufficient testing?!
3) Many supplements out there simply don't work. He cites echinacea and ginkgo biloba, among others, that continue to be sold and promoted despite research showing that they are not effective. We as PWC's know this well, who have spend hundreds of dollars on supplements desperately trying to find something to alleviate our symptoms.
4) Because of the lack of research, misinformation, and lack of regulation, there are supplements that are dangerous, or dangerous for certain people, in certain quantities, but none of this is clear. There is no protection.
5) The supplement industry people have a LOT of power and fight any kind of attempted regulation tooth and nail, playing off the FDA and western medicine as evil.
Is anyone else familiar with this book? I, as do many of us, rely heavily on supplements to alleviate my symptoms and the book scared me. I don't want to waste money, ingest lead, etc.
What do you think?
Thanks,
Laura