The
Dietary Supplement Experiment Begins
We are about to start a large informal medical experiment in
Australia. Following the recall of products made by Pan
Pharmaceuticals there is likely to be a shortage of dietary
supplements, as Pan was the largest manufacturer of these in the
country and produced many of the best-known brands. If these
chemicals are as essential as we have been told then the effect of
a shortage should be noticeable.
What are dietary supplements?
As the name suggests, they add to the value of food. Many of the
things needed for life are made inside the body by processing the
food intake, but some chemicals must be included in the food for
the process to operate correctly. Some of these are catalysts,
some are essential ingredients for the digestion process, and some
are broken down in the body because their component elements are
necessary. In a balanced diet, all are obtained from food in
suitable quantities. Dietary supplements are packages of these
chemicals consumed as medication rather than as food.
Are supplements necessary?
Humans have evolved to survive on a broad omnivorous diet, which
has allowed us to live almost anywhere on Earth. The fact that we
are here shows that for a very long time we must have been able to
get all we need from our food, so it must be possible to live and
reproduce without pills.
It is also a fact that we didn’t evolve with the processed
foods that many eat today, but experience suggests that problems
of poor diet are more evident in places where people live closer
to nature than in countries where the majority think that “pizza”
is a food group. Not everyone eats properly, so there may be times
when extra vitamins or a mineral supplement could be beneficial,
and there is also evidence that certain vitamins can protect
against some diseases when taken in quantities greater than the
minimum.
These comments only apply to vitamins and essential minerals,
where deficiencies can lead to specific diseases. It is much
harder to make a case for many of the other products sold as
supplements.
Are supplements safe?
Vitamins and essential minerals are probably relatively harmless
when taken in amounts close to the recommended doses because these
recommendations are deliberately conservative. Some fat-soluble
vitamins, like Vitamin A, can be dangerous if taken in large
quantities because the body stores them for later use and
excessive consumption can be toxic. Generally the result of taking
more vitamins than your body needs is to produce brightly
coloured, expensive urine. The danger comes from products sold as
supplements that are, in fact, chemicals with a pharmacological
action.
The average person assumes that anything with official approval
will be safe, of good quality, and will work as described. The
Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) has two classifications for
medical products - “listing” (AUST L) and “registration”
(AUST R). Both require evidence of manufacturing quality, safety
when used as recommended, and truth in describing the contents on
package labels. Registration is the higher standard and is
required for products that are more dangerous. Leaving aside the
manufacturing problems at Pan, the public generally assumes that
anything with an “AUST L” number is safe to take. This
assumption leads to two dangerous possibilities.
The first is adverse interactions with other drugs taken either
as supplements, over-the-counter medications or by prescription.
The “alternative medicine” industry has done such a good job
of equating “natural” with “completely safe” that people
tend to think that no harm can come from such products no matter
what they are mixed with. When your doctor asks if you are taking
any other medication, answering “No” because the other things
being taken are “natural” herbal supplements can lead to
disaster.
Another danger is the risk inherent in all alternative
medicine. People may avoid effective medication because they
prefer to self-medicate with products that they believe are
effective without the dangers and side-effects of pharmaceutical
drugs.
Do supplements work?
It might surprise many to find out that TGA listing carries no
obligation to prove efficacy. (Registration does have this
requirement, as products with higher risk are expected to have
some balancing benefit.) Listed products are assumed to be safe
because they have no bad effects, but this just means that they
may have no good effects either. Provided that no specific claims
are made about cures, supplements with an “AUST L” number can
exist for no other reason than to transfer money from your wallet
to a herb seller’s bank account.
Like any true skeptic or scientist, I look for evidence that
things are so. In alternative medicine, the claim is often made
that the onus is on skeptics to prove that things are not so. I
don’t think that the big experiment will satisfy either side,
but I also don’t expect epidemics of the illnesses that these
supplements are supposed to prevent.
This article by Peter Bowditch appeared in the June 2003
edition of Australasian
Science
