The
big vitamin scare: American Medical Association
claims vitamins may kill you
The latest round in conventional medicine's ongoing
attempts to discredit (and ultimately outlaw) nutritional
supplements is found in a highly questionable study
published this week in the Journal of the American
Medical Association, which claims that vitamins actually
increase the risk of death.
The study claims to have analyzed a collection of
previous studies on Vitamin A, beta carotene, Vitamin
C, Vitamin E and selenium, concluding that most of
the nutrients are actually dangerous to human health.
Of course, this is research from conventional medicine – an
industry that promotes patented chemicals as perfectly
safe, even though FDA-approved pharmaceuticals are
killing 100,000 Americans each year. (Imagine the uproar
if vitamins killed even a fraction of that number…)
To avoid getting hoodwinked by questionable research
on "vitamins," you have to strongly consider
the financial interests of the source of this research.
JAMA accepts millions of dollars in advertising from
drug companies each year, and its pages are absolutely
packed with drug ads. The American Medical Association,
for its part, has long worked to discredit alternative
medicine and has even been found guilty by U.S. federal
courts of engaging in a conspiracy to destroy chiropractic
medicine. The AMA, which is largely considered a joke
by anyone familiar with natural health, is hardly a
credible source for publishing scientific findings
on nutrition. To protect the multi-billion dollar drug
industry, the AMA would say practically anything, I
believe.
How to fake a vitamin study
Faking a vitamin study to show supplements as harmful
is extremely easy to pull off, by the way. All you
have to do is use synthetic forms of the vitamins and
avoid using natural, food-sourced vitamins. These synthetic
vitamins – which are really just industrial chemicals – may
be called "Vitamin E" or "Vitamin A" or
even "Vitamin C" but they have no functional
resemblance to the real vitamins that occur in nature.
Every single study over the past two decades that has
sought to discredit Vitamin E, for example, focused
on using synthetic Vitamin E in order to show harm.
It is curious that no researcher from the world of
conventional medicine will ever test the natural, full-spectrum
vitamins, nutrients and phytochemicals that appear
in nature. You know why? Because they would discover
a universe of natural medicine that makes patented
prescription drugs obsolete.
A second way to fake a vitamin meta-data study is
to simply cherry-pick the results you want to include
in your meta-data analysis. This is a routine trick
used by dishonest researchers who have an agenda of
discrediting nutritional supplements. To pull this
one off, they simply eliminate all previous studies
that showed positive results for vitamins, and include
only previous studies that showed negative results.
Then they run a statistical analysis on all the studies
they hand-picked and declare – surprise! – those
vitamins are dangerous! Many of the studies on vitamin
E, by the way, were conducted on dying heart patients
who were only expected to live two weeks, regardless
of what they took.
A third way to distort the science is to confuse people
with statistical obfuscation. The reporting on this
particular study, for example, confuses absolute risk
with relative risk. Vitamin A, according to the reports
on this study, increased mortality risk by 16 percent.
But that is a relative risk number, meaning that if
1 person out of 100 normally died, then 1.16 people
out of 100 would die when taking these synthetic Vitamin
A supplements. In other words, it might not even be
one additional person out of 100, or even out of 1000.
And yet, it is curious that when conventional medical
researchers report the results of mortality risks for
their prescription drugs, they always use absolute
risk. They say things like, "Well, this drug only
increased the risk by one percent." But what they
are not saying is that it may be a 200% relative increase
in mortality risk, depending on the baseline absolute
mortality numbers. So if only 0.5 people out of 100
normally died from heart disease during a particular
study, but 1.5 people died when taking a drug during
that study, the relative risk increase is 200%. But
the medical journals and the mainstream media will
report is at a "one percent increase."
You see how the game is played? Here's the con:
• All statistics on the dangers of prescription
drugs are reported as absolute risk to make the numbers
seem smaller (and make drugs seem safe).
• All statistics on the dangers of synthetic
vitamins are reported as relative risk to make the
numbers seem larger (and vitamins seem dangerous).
And this is how conventional medicine lies with statistics.
It's only one of the many tricks used to disinform
the American public about the dangers of pharmaceuticals
or the benefits of nutrition.
This research published in JAMA does remind us of
one important point, however: synthetic chemicals are
harmful to human health. If you take cheap "vitamins" made
of these synthetic chemicals, you are doing yourself
more harm than good. These cheap vitamin manufacturers,
by the way, are usually owned by pharmaceutical firms.
I would personally never take vitamins purchased at
common retailers such as Wal-Mart or Walgreens. I only
recommend and consume vitamins from high-end nutritional
supplement companies.
Blurring the line to scare consumers
But conventional medicine researchers try to blur
the line between "junk vitamins" and "quality
vitamins" by classifying all nutritional supplements
as "vitamins," regardless of what they're
really made from. By discrediting a few synthetic chemicals,
they can effectively dissuade the masses from taking
ANY vitamins, including the good ones. And that is,
of course, their goal: to use FUD (fear, uncertainty
and doubt) to scare consumers away from nutritional
supplements so that patients will flock to the patented,
synthetic chemicals that earn drug companies billions
of dollars in profits. Drugs make money for Big Pharma,
and vitamins compete with drug sales. Once you understand
the economics and the motives of the parties involved
here, the junk science con becomes quite obvious: Pushers
of pharmaceuticals will always use dirty tricks to
discredit nutritional supplements because it is in
their financial interests to do so.
My own financial interests, by the way, are squeaky
clean. I sell no supplements, I earn no money from
supplement companies, and in fact I am not even paid
by NewsTarget for my work on these articles. In terms
of potential conflicts of interest, I have far more
credibility than the AMA, a shady organization that
remains mired in blatant conflicts of interest and
a frightening agenda of pushing drugs, surgery and
radiation onto as many Americans as possible.
Now, here's a common sense way to quickly realize
the JAMA research is complete nonsense. Round up 100
people who are taking multiple pharmaceuticals, and
compare their health to 100 people who are taking vitamins
and nutritional supplements. Guess who's healthier?
The supplement crowd will be healthier every time.
It's the obvious question: If vitamins are so dangerous,
where are all the dead vitamin takers? And if pharmaceuticals
are so safe, where are all the super-healthy prescription
drug patients? They are nowhere to be found.
The healthiest people, by far, are those who take
supplements, who engage in regular exercise, and who
avoid taking prescription drugs.
Why conventional medical researchers remain nutritionally
illiterate
Western medicine still doesn't "get" nutrition.
They think all health effects are achieved by single,
isolated chemical constituents. But nutrition doesn't
work that way. In nature, for example, Vitamin C is
not a single chemical, but rather a symphony of complementary
phytonutrients that work in concert. Conventional medical
researchers almost never test plant medicine using
full-spectrum nutrients. Why? Because they don't understand
the concept of nutritional synergy.
The bottom line? Only fools believe research about
nutrition that comes from the American Medical Association
or its journal. Conventional medical researchers declaring
that vitamins are worthless is about as credible as
Bush Administration climatologists claiming there's
no such thing as global warming.
With the publication of this research, the distortion
of health reality is now complete. According to the
Americal Medical Association, vitamins will kill you
but pharmaceuticals will make you healthy.
Someone help me stop laughing before I blow out a
lung and require surgery. |