The most elementary of forensic arguments
is, where are the bodies?
The 2003 Annual Report of the American Association of
Poison Control Centers Toxic Exposures Surveillance System
(1) states that there have been only two deaths allegedly
caused by vitamins. Almost half of all Americans take
nutritional supplements every day, some 145,000,000
individual doses daily, for a total of over 53 billion
doses annually. And from that, two alleged deaths? That is
a product safety record without equal.
Conversely, pharmaceutical drugs, properly prescribed and
taken as directed, kill 106,000 Americans each year. That
is over 2,000 each week, dead from their prescriptions.
(2) Some physicians estimate the true number of
drug-induced deaths to be far higher. (3)
Fatalities are by no means limited to drug products. In
the USA in the year 2003, there was a death from "Cream /
lotion / makeup," a death from "Granular laundry
detergent," one death from plain soap, one death from
baking soda, and one death from table salt.
Other deaths reported by the American Association of
Poison Control Centers included:
aspirin: 59 deaths
aerosol air fresheners: 2 deaths
perfume/cologne/aftershave: 2 deaths
charcoal: 3 deaths
dishwashing detergent: 3 deaths
(and interestingly, weapons of mass destruction: 0 deaths)
On the other hand, nutritional supplements have proven to
be exceptionally safe. Specifically:
-
There were no deaths from B-complex vitamin
supplements.
-
There were no deaths from niacin.
-
There were no deaths from vitamin A.
-
There were no deaths from vitamin D.
-
There were no deaths from vitamin E.
There was, supposedly, one alleged death
from vitamin C and one alleged death from vitamin B-6. The
accuracy of such attribution is highly questionable, as
water-soluble vitamins such as B-6 (pyridoxine) and
vitamin C (ascorbate) have excellent safety records
extending back for many decades. The 2003 Toxic Exposures
Surveillance System report states that reported deaths are
"probably or undoubtedly related to the exposure," an
admission of uncertainty in the reporting. (p 340)
Even if true, such events are aberrations. For example,
previous American Association of Poison Control Centers'
Toxic Exposure Surveillance System reports show zero
fatalities from either vitamins C or B-6.
VITAMINS SAVE LIVES
The Journal of the American Medical Association has
published the recommendation that every person take a
multivitamin daily saying that "(S)uboptimal intake of
some vitamins, above levels causing classic vitamin
deficiency, is a risk factor for chronic diseases and
common in the general population, especially the elderly."
(4) It is a sensible idea whose time should have come
generations ago.
It is curious that, while theorizing many "potential"
dangers of vitamins, critics fail to point out how
economical supplements are. For low-income households,
taking a two-cent vitamin C tablet and a five-cent
multivitamin, readily obtainable from any discount store,
is vastly cheaper than getting those vitamins by eating
right. The uncomfortable truth is that it is often less
expensive to supplement than to buy nutritious food,
especially out-of-season fresh produce.
According to David DeRose, M.D., M.P.H., "300,000
Americans die annually from poor nutrition choices." (5)
Supplements make any dietary lifestyle, whether good or
bad, significantly better. Supplements are an easy,
practical entry-level better-nutrition solution for the
public, who are more likely to take convenient vitamin
tablets than to willingly eat organ meats, wheat germ, and
ample vegetables. Scare-stories notwithstanding, taking
supplements is not the problem; it is a solution.
Malnutrition is the problem.
Public supplementation should be encouraged, not
discouraged. Supplements are a cost-effective means of
preventing and ameliorating illness. Vitamin safety has
been, and remains, extraordinarily high.
References:
1. American Journal of Emergency Medicine, Vol. 22, No. 5,
September 2004. (http://www.aapcc.org/Annual%20Reports/03report/Annual%20Report%202003.pdf)
2. Lucian Leape, Error in medicine. Journal of the
American Medical Association, 1994, 272:23, p 1851. Also:
Leape LL. Institute of Medicine medical error figures are
not exaggerated. JAMA. 2000 Jul 5;284(1):95-7.
3. Dean C and Tuck T. Death by modern medicine.
Belleville, ON: Matrix Verite, 2005.
4. Fletcher RH and Fairfield KM. Vitamins for chronic
disease prevention in adults: Clinical applications JAMA.
2002; 287:3127-3129. And: Fairfield KM and Fletcher RH.
Vitamins for chronic disease prevention in adults:
Scientific review. JAMA. 2002; 287:3116-3126.
5.
http://fermi.jhuapl.edu/wej/ww_95sep03.html
What is
Orthomolecular Medicine?
Linus Pauling defined orthomolecular medicine as "the
treatment of disease by the provision of the optimum
molecular environment, especially the optimum
concentrations of substances normally present in the human
body." Orthomolecular medicine uses safe, effective
nutritional therapy to fight illness. For more
information: www.orthomolecular.org