Anyone who thinks the typical American diet provides all the required nutritional elements to stay healthy is seriously misguided. Don’t bother asking most doctors for nutritional guidance. You will likely be told: “Just eat a balanced diet, and you will be fine. Don’t waste your money on vitamins.” Overlook that he was probably not taught about nutrition in medical school. Very few medical schools teach about nutrition. That ignores the reality that, over time, we become what we eat.
Have you had a bowl of sugary, artificially colored, and nutritionally worthless “cereal” this morning???? If you did, that’s not part of a well-balanced diet—it’s junk.
Here’s a study from 2003: “New Study Finds Increased Vitamin Use By The Elderly Could Save Medicare $1.6 Billion.” (Please read the report for yourself. It’s easy to read – three double-spaced pages.)
Fast forward to 2024: “Taking a daily multivitamin may improve memory and slow cognitive decline in older adults, according to a third major study on the topic” (COSMOS-Mind: Daily Multivitamin Improves Cognition in Older Adults). So much research points to the effectiveness of taking a multivitamin every day. Why aren’t seniors, in particular, not taking a supplement to help themselves?
Here are a few reasons:
- Vitamins cost too much, and I’m on a fixed income. (Everything is expensive. Prioritize. Do you need that box of Snickerdoodle cookies ? Or a box of Fruit Loops? Or that bottle of wine and bottle of Johnnie Walker?)
- My doctor says I shouldn’t bother, that the need for a lot of vitamins is misinformation. (He had two sugar doughnuts and Coke for breakfast).
- I don’t believe in taking vitamins. (Your loss).
- They made my neighbor sick (Ignorance isn’t bliss. Think for yourself).
- Drug store vitamins are cheaply made in back alley labs (Centrum is an excellent vitamin supplement from Pfizer, also the manufacturer of a COVID-19 vaccine. While I deplore the “vaccine,” — it’s not made in a “back alley lab, and neither are the vitamins.
- Bad press. There is always somebody with an axe to grind that will badmouth ANYTHING.
Recently I went to the doctor for a suspected broken finger. I got my licks in for a multivitamin and a few other things that I take. The visit went like this:
MD: What medications do you take? (It’s always the first question.)
Me: None
MD: NONE?? (He’s fresh out of med school, so he is horrified that I am not taking any meds.)
Me: Correct. I do not take medications, but I do take vitamins and some cutting-edge products. Would you like to know what some of them are?
MD. Sure. Tell me what you take. ( He prepares to write them down.)
ME: Well, I take a super high-potency multivitamin called OcuDyne II from Allergy Research Group every morning. I take four of those.
Also, I’ve been taking resveratrol for a long time. ( He smirks. He recalls that the Alzheimers Association rejected it because an ordinary dose didn’t cure Alzheimer’s Disease.)
ME: I also have been taking Sirolomus for the past year.
MD: Spell it, please. I’ve never heard of that one.
Me: It’s also known as Rapamycin. It’s usually given to organ transplant patients to prevent rejection. I’ve learned much about its anti-aging benefits from my friend Dr. Ross Pelton, who wrote an easy-to-understand book about it called Rapamycin. Oh, I forgot to mention that I also take Spermidine.
MD: Exasperated, he mutters, “Okay—okay. I get the picture. Let’s move on. So why are you here?”
Me: I was trying to open a jar of wheat germ with a wrench, but it slipped, and I smashed my finger really good. It hurts. My finger might be broken. (it wasn’t.)
Be kind to yourself and proactive about your health. If nothing else, research shows that taking a good multivitamin daily is a wise decision — even if your neighbor or doctor disagrees! It might even help a broken finger heal more quickly.
"Ginger" says
Dear Barbara, this is chock-full of helpful “put old on hold” information–thank you so much for generously sharing some of the secrets to your great success in that department! Will look into some of these supplements. Thank you for the reminder about resveratrol.
Warmly,
“Ginger”
Barbara Morris says
Thank you, Miss Ginger, for your kind words. Drop me a line and I will be more than happy to share my “secrets” in detail
Barbara