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Dietary Supplements may Not be Safe for All

by Julia Samuel on Jul 28 2016 9:03 PM

Dietary Supplements may Not be Safe for All
Certain ingredients in dietary supplements sold around the country can carry major health risks, including heart palpitations, allergic reactions and pain.
A new study by Consumer Reports outlined health risks associated with dietary supplements including vitamins, probiotics and weight-loss aids. Unlike drug products that must be proven safe and effective, dietary supplements do not have to go through FDA approval.

Consumer Reports worked with independent doctors and dietary experts to identify 15 ingredients they say consumers should always avoid. They include caffeine powder found in some weight-loss supplements - like Kava, which claims to reduce anxiety and red yeast rice in supplements, which claims to reduce cholesterol.

The Council for Responsible Nutrition -- which represents the supplement industry -- responded in a statement: "More than 150 million Americans take dietary supplements each year. Overwhelmingly, dietary supplements are safe and play a valuable role in helping Americans live healthy lifestyles."

Dr. Pieter Cohen, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School, disagrees. "Consumers need to know that they cannot trust that anything sold as a supplement is what's actually listed on the label," Cohen said. "Nor that it works. Or that it's safe."

The FDA acknowledged its limited role in regulating the industry, saying "it's important to remind consumers, that just because you can buy supplements in stores doesn't mean the FDA has reviewed them for safety or efficacy."

Source-Medindia


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