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Take multivitamins, AMA urges in policy reversal
By Ronald Kotulak
Chicago Tribune
CHICAGO Reversing a long-standing anti-vitamin policy, The
Journal of the American Medical Association today is advising all
adults to take at least one multivitamin pill each day.
Scientists' understanding of the benefits of vitamins has rapidly
advanced, and it now appears that people who get enough vitamins
may be able to prevent such common chronic illnesses as cancer,
heart disease and osteoporosis, according to Drs. Robert Fletcher
and Kathleen Fairfield of Harvard University, who wrote the new
guidelines.
The last time JAMA made a comprehensive review of vitamins, about
20 years ago, it concluded people of normal health shouldn't take
multivitamins because they were a waste of time and money. People
can get all the nutrients they need from their diet, JAMA advised,
adding that only pregnant women and chronically sick people may
need certain vitamins.
That was at a time when knowledge about vitamins was just beginning
to expand. The role that low levels of folate, or folic acid, play
in neural tube defects, for instance, was not known, nor was its
role as a major risk factor for heart disease.
Researchers hope JAMA's endorsement will encourage more people
to reap health benefits of a daily multivitamin.
Health experts are increasingly worried that most American adults
do not consume healthy amounts of vitamins in their diet, although
they may be getting enough to ward off such vitamin-deficiency disorders
as scurvy, beriberi and pellagra.
Almost 80 percent of Americans do not eat at least five helpings
of fruits and vegetables a day, the recommended minimum amount believed
to provide sufficient essential nutrients. Humans do not make their
own vitamins, except for some vitamin D, and they must get them
from an outside source to prevent metabolic disorders.
"It's nice to see this change in philosophy that's saying
we can make public-health recommendations based on this really compelling
set of data," said Dr. Jeffrey Blumberg, chief of antioxidant
research at Tufts University's Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research
Center on Aging.
Blumberg said the JAMA recommendations underscore a growing concern
among nutrition experts that the recommended daily allowances, or
RDAs, for many vitamins are set too low.
RDAs essentially were established to prevent symptoms of vitamin-deficiency
disorders, he said. But evidence is growing that higher levels of
many vitamins are necessary to achieve optimum health, he said.
The National Academy of Sciences, which sets RDAs, is revising its
recommendations based on the new evidence.
Even people who eat five daily servings of fruits and vegetables
may not get enough of certain vitamins for optimum health, Fletcher
said. Most people, for instance, cannot get the healthiest levels
of folate and vitamins D and E from recommended diets, he said.
"All of us grew up believing that if we ate a reasonable diet,
that would take care of our vitamin needs," Fletcher said.
"But the new evidence, much of it in the last couple of years,
is that vitamins also prevent the usual diseases we deal with every
day heart disease, cancer, osteoporosis and birth defects."
Because foods contain thousands of vitaminlike compounds
many not yet identified that may be important for good health,
vitamin supplements should not be a substitute for a wholesome diet,
Blumberg said.
In another matter, the AMA yesterday urged researchers to study
whether financial payments would ease the nation's critical shortage
of transplant organs. Its policymaking House of Delegates voted
at its annual meeting to adopt the measure against the recommendation
of a committee, which heard from doctors Sunday who called such
payments unethical and said that even studying them would cheapen
the value of organ donation.
The measure involves organs from cadavers, not living donors, and
supports research into payments such as reimbursement for funeral
expenses.
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