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Is anyone going to add to this article? Right now it should be merged with orthomolecular medicine, which needs some more content. Since my merge/redirect were reverted, I'm adding a merge tag. --] 19:18, 2 January 2006 (UTC) | |||
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I think megavitamin therapy should stay separate from orthomolecular medicine. First, megavitamin therapy is but one modality in orthomolecular medicine, albeit probably the part with most name recognition. Hence a separate article, for quick reference and, long term, for separate distinction in more of the public's mind as a piece of OM, *not* synonymous with OM. ] 12:15, 15 January 2006 | |||
== falsehoods in Megavitamin therapy article == | |||
re: Molecular Disease | |||
Linus Pauling was generally recognized for his discovery of molecular disease and molecular medicine with biochemical explanation of sickle cell anemia due to tenth order biopolymer kinetics at the threshhold of oxygen depletion, hence its treatment (mo' oxygen!). This is the foundation of molecular medicine and later, orthomolecular medicine. Academia and the pharmas are spending hundreds of millions of $ pa on molecular medicine. LP won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry shortly (5 yr) afterwards. | |||
from Stedman's Online Medical Dictionary, 27th Edition: molecular disease - a disease in which the manifestations are due to alterations in molecular structure and function. | |||
from Dictionary.com: molecular disease - A disease in which there is an abnormality in or a deficiency of a particular molecule, such as hemoglobin in sickle cell anemia. 03:13, 18 January 2006 69.178.31.177 | |||
I have detailed my arguments in the history section. | |||
==references need(ed) work== | |||
I am removing the QW link here. I allow(ed) it as a counterpoint ref in orthomolecular medicine simply because I haven't seen a more concise position stmt. Once is enough. OM is linked here, so QW is represented, just not directly promoted again. The link is a skillful weave of literary fact, offical political ("scientific") positions, and indirect references to popular "factoids" (see Hoffer) or popular misconceptions without actually restating them. This likely misleads less sophisticated readers. It uses individual facts mixed with ambiguous generalities that may avoid an easily provable "wrong" but mislead ordinarily informed readers to draw erroneous conclusions. For example, I think many ordinary readers likely think that RDAs are around the "physiological needs" or "capacity" nebulously mentioned there but carefuly not elaborated "...as drugs rather than vitamins". The "RDA conservative" faces several tough issues of low limits. An example: large individual biochemical and situational variation such as flat out problems with the actual RDAs used for vitamin D. Is that 200-400-600 IU? or 2000-4000 IU? Apparent deficiencies with other vitamins/nutrients may complicate D'issue (ahem) but it is a critical health issue in northern climes. Also pharmacology professors Hickey and Roberts have carefully dissected the shortcomings of the vitamin C RDA. | |||
"Quackwatch" is not reliable: http://longevitylibrary.com/article/243.pdf | |||
Of course some of these things are definitional and conceptual. e.g. QW, if it acknowledged the utility of Cathcart's bowel tolerance vitamin C regimen, say 40-100 g/day for several common illnesses, would presumably call that a drug. Whereas some animals manufacture these peak levels to meet their internal physiological needs during the stress of illness, an orthomolecular view would not be as a (toximolecular) drug. Also the vitamin concept as conventionally promoted misleads with a simple "equivalence" among different molecules with significant impacts for population segments amongst vitamins B's, D, E, K and provitamins for A. ] 22:42 15 January 2006 | |||
Of course people have not viewed that article. What it shows is that Barett frequently engages in character assasinations, does not have an authoritative background (he was a bit of a failure until he got into his recent bit of hucksterism), that there are a plethora of peer reviewed studies on Pubmed supporting CAM, that there are authoritative sources completely refuting Barett on many of his major points, and that he has shamelessly libeled his opponents, as exposed in court cases. It uses facsimilies of primary documents from a recent court case to prove it's point. | |||
==rtg== | |||
I cannot see a basis for the "unverified" sign. The article is presented pretty straightforward. As stated in edit notes, it was heavily linked. It has comprehensive references, enough to begin to distract from the article with anymore. Pls state specific objections to any sentence. | |||
For the various vitamin citations, I have given mainstream medical publications that refute the other arguments. The citation on Schizophrenia shows that vitamins do indeed help prevent mental illness - hence refuting the fundamental objections to orthomolecular medicine. | |||
The external link section is balanced 1:1, pro/con. As previously stated, the specific qw link is boringly repetitive, slightly off topic, and provocative (as I said once was enough, simply to directly balance reference POV in namesake orthomolecular links, not quality). Qw authors & predecessor forms, spearheading a multi decade, anticompetitive persecution, are now suffering consecutive losses in court. Please try to come with a higher quality link, and more than 1:1 max the section simply becomes anti-V POV, rather than on topic "MV". | |||
For some reason, the "doctor yourself" website has been deemed "unreliable". Hoaxers like Stephen Barett are given ample space. Nevertheless, the doctor yourself website has an excellent overview of this insanity. I will post just the beginning of the article: http://www.doctoryourself.com/safety.html | |||
== POV tag == | |||
By golly, Lincoln was right. You really can fool some of the people all of the time. When the topic is vitamins, some of the most easily fooled are news broadcasters and newspaper reporters. | |||
Megavitamin therapy is generally considered quackery, but the article consists entirely of the minority point of view. -- ] 15:45, 6 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
:"Generally" seems over overgeneralized, at least in those states with licensed, degreed naturopathic doctors (who may use a "megavitamin therapy") as well as treatments long recognized in conventional medicine or emerging in conventional medical schools. Megavitamin therapy, as described by a number of serious MD/PhD types, is serious if controversial, and sometimes adversarially disputed where modern research on specific vitamers clearly calls current RDA/DRI rationales for preventive nutrition into question , much less therapeutic levels such as niacin for mixed dyslipidemias where it is really the #1 (gold standard) treatment molecule (of course it is not exactly advertised that $2-$5/mo of niacin often can do a better job than $200/month of a highly advertised fungal toxin). Oh, yes, there is now a pharma patent on adding niacin to the fungal toxin so that the combined material better addresses the all other dislipidemia measures (triglycerides, IDL, apoB, Lp(a), small dense LDL, HDL<SUB>2b<SUB>, etc) other than the less atherogenic component of LDL (of 3 LDL related components) effectively controlled by the fungal product. The quackery part is a clear 'tude and pejorative in such cases. The article is descriptive and historical in nature about the subject.--] 21:48, 6 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
IF YOU HAVE RECENTLY HEARD THAT VITAMINS ARE HARMFUL, you may want to read this page, or at least as much of it as you need to get your perspective back. | |||
How to Make People Believe Any Anti-Vitamin Scare | |||
It Just Takes Lots of Pharmaceutical Industry Cash | |||
by Andrew W. Saul, Orthomolecular Medicine News Service, October 20, 2011 | |||
Recent much trumpeted anti-vitamin news is the product of pharmaceutical company payouts. No, this is not one of "those" conspiracy theories. Here's how it's done: | |||
1) Cash to study authors. Many of the authors of a recent negative vitamin E paper (1) have received substantial income from the pharmaceutical industry. The names are available in the last page of the paper (1556) in the "Conflict of Interest" section. You will not see them in the brief summary at the JAMA website. A number of the study authors have received money from pharmaceutical companies, including Merck, Pfizer, Sanofi-Aventis, AstraZeneca, Abbott, GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, Amgen, Firmagon, and Novartis. | |||
::Arguing that something isn't generally considered quackery by noting that it's approved of by "naturopathic" "doctors" is rather self-defeating, given that "naturopaths" are generally considered quacks graduated by diploma mills. The article is POV, rather than "descriptive and historical", because it lists none of the evidence against, nor the general consensus of quackery. -- ] 21:58, 6 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
2) Advertising revenue. Many popular magazines and almost all major medical journals receive income from the pharmaceutical industry. The only question is, how much? Pick up a copy of the publication and count the pharmaceutical ads. The more space sold, the more revenue for the publication. If you try to find their advertisement revenue, you'll see that they don't disclose it. So, just count the Pharma ads. Look in them all: Readers Digest http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v06n11.shtml , JAMA, Newsweek, Time, AARP Today, NEJM, Archives of Pediatrics. Even Prevention magazine. Practically any major periodical. | |||
:::See my respones at . You should be aware that the ND licensure states would not be agreeable to "diploma mill" degrees, they want 4-5 years in an accredited school. Also you are ignoring areas that conventional medicine (Europe, Japan, and/or US) is actually in agreement, niacin and vitamin D are examples as above, or the original source. (ditto A, B's, E, K2, Q10, a number of enzymes, Se, Cr), never mind some of the more interesting pharma patents that actually provide biological support. The quackery part is unwelcome where there are real references to real science, and the "generally" part is about 10-20 years too late anyway.--] 00:01, 7 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
3) Rigged trials. Yes, it is true and yes it is provable. In a recent editorial, we explained how trials of new drugs are often rigged at http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v04n20.shtml . Studies of the health benefits of vitamins and essential nutrients also appear to be rigged. This can be easily done by using low doses to guarantee a negative result, and by biasing the interpretation to show a statistical increase in risk. | |||
===pov, expert tags=== | |||
You are not scoring factual points yet. This is a factual article that describes the subject of a reasonably rapidly growing, controversial medical-scientific minority. Just because they are a minority doesn't validate red lining the article. Please point to 1 - 2 sentences that you disagree with. Add interesting, *cogent* criticism. Most of this article is simply historical, descriptive and appropriately referenced. I can only see a personal opinion so far wholly unsupported by any factual basis. Actually the previous conventional medicine complaint was that there were <i>too many<i> superscripted references. The section is plenty of warning that not everyone agrees about everything. Description of the subject is primary, not outside unsupported opinions that have already been covered, as in OM.--] 05:04, 7 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
4) Bias in what is published, or rejected for publication. The largest and most popular medical journals receive very large income from pharmaceutical advertising. Peer-reviewed research indicates that this influences what they print, and even what study authors conclude from their data. http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v05n02.shtml . | |||
5) Censorship of what is indexed and available to doctors and the public. Public tax money pays for censorship in the largest public medical library on the planet: the US National Library of Medicine (MEDLINE/PubMed). http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v06n03.shtml. See also: http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v06n05.shtml. | |||
Don't Believe It? | |||
:Read the ] guidelines already. I've explained the position and the problem. -- ] 14:01, 7 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
How well were these pro-vitamin, anti-drug studies covered in the mass media? | |||
•A Harvard study showed a 27% reduction in AIDS deaths among patients given vitamin supplements. (2) | |||
•There have been no deaths from vitamins in 27 years. http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v07n05.shtml | |||
•Antibiotics cause 700,000 emergency room visits per year, just in the US. (3) | |||
•Modern drug-and-cut medicine is at least the third leading cause of death in the USA. Some estimates place medicine as the number one cause of death. (4) | |||
•Over 1.5 million Americans are injured every year by drug errors in hospitals, doctors' offices, and nursing homes. If in a hospital, a patient can expect at least one medication error every single day. (5) | |||
•More than 100,000 patients die every year, just in the US, from drugs properly prescribed and taken as directed. (6) | |||
Double Standard | |||
You broadside "skeptical...", "pseudoscience" and "quackery" without foundation here and at orthomolecular medicine; this is clearly asserting POV. You accuse me of "sanitizing" an article when I am bending over backwards to try to improve the article over any potential disagreement with merit; this is not "assuming good faith". You refuse to discuss the article or any specifics, where you are clearly discounting it en masse (the pejorative labels). The article is actually constructed with SPOV in mind. The article herein refers to the specific lifework of the following authors: | |||
* Abram Hoffer, PhD U. Minnesota, MD U. Toronto | |||
* William B. Parsons, Jr. MD, Mayo Clinic | |||
* Roger J. Williams, PhD U. Chicago (magna cum laude), vitamin discoverer, professor, founder of Clayton Biochemical Institute at U Texas, National Academy of Sciences, President, American Chemical Society | |||
* Irwin Stone, research biochemist, long industrial patent series on ascorbic acid | |||
* Linus Pauling PhD CalTech, Prof Chemistry CalTech, Stanford, two time solo Nobelist, pioneer in modern organic chemistry, biochemistry, molecular biology, molecular medicine, coined "orthomolecular" | |||
* Drs. James, Evan, Wilfrid Shute, Canadian pioneers in vitamin E | |||
* Fred R. Klenner MS Biology, doctoral studies in Physiology, MD Duke University | |||
* William Kaufman, MD, PhD, both U Michigan, gme fellow at Yale. | |||
Countless comedians have made fun of the incompetent physician who, when called late at night during a life- threatening disease crisis, says, "take two aspirin and call me in the morning." It's no longer funny. One of the largest pharmaceutical conglomerates in the world ran prime- time national television commercials that declared: "Bayer aspirin may actually help stop you from dying if you take it during a heart attack." The company also promotes such use of its product on the Internet. http://www.wonderdrug.com/ , formerly http://www.bayeraspirin.com/news/heart_attack.htm | |||
These are hard-to-dismiss qualifications as mere "quacks" with lifetimes of research and literature. Hanging out the NPOV sign is not a permanent roadside sign of convenience. Assuming good faith, and trying to favorably interpret the NPOV sign to you, all I can divine is that means your POV is that "pseudoscience" and "quackery" are still your version of being polite about a crock, fakes or frauds. It would also mean that you have less familiarity with the relevant scientific and medical literature in an industrial segment that is highly controlled and influenced by various rent seeking interests. I might point out that certain popular "antiquack" authors have beaten an involuntary retreat in the face of legal and technical developments. Actually reading some of the literature involved, they still have miles to go on retreat on some subjects. | |||
Daily Aspirin Use Linked With Pancreatic Cancer | |||
Here's something you may have not seen. Research has shown that women who take just one aspirin a day, "which millions do to prevent heart attack and stroke as well as to treat headaches - may raise their risk of getting deadly pancreatic cancer. . . . Pancreatic cancer affects only 31,000 Americans a year, but it kills virtually all its victims within three years. The study of 88,000 nurses found that those who took two or more aspirins a week for 20 years or more had a 58 percent higher risk of pancreatic cancer." (7) Women who took two or more aspirin tablets per day had an alarming 86 percent greater risk of pancreatic cancer. | |||
Study author Dr. Eva Schernhammer of Harvard Medical School was quoted as saying: "Apart from smoking, this is one of the few risk factors that have been identified for pancreatic cancer. Initially we expected that aspirin would protect against pancreatic cancer." | |||
So far all I see is an uninforming tag attack. If you have a specific complaint, pls show it. There are "Controversy" and "side effect" boxes, edit them. If there is a misstatment of fact, nail it. If you are unhappy with *any* sentence, lets discuss it. I've asked for any improvement or suggestion possible.--] 01:22, 8 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
How about that. | |||
:Sir. You greatly misunderstand the point of NPOV. You are arguing that you are correct. I don't believe that you are, but '''it is irrelevant'''. The problem is that the majority point of view is not reflected in this article, as ] requires. -- ] 03:37, 8 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
Say: What if there was one, just one case of pancreatic cancer caused by a vitamin? What do you think the press would have said about that? | |||
Actually the article is about megavitamin therapy, its referenced facts and history. Opinions are not needed for substitution, majority or not; they are notable primarily in the part because they are just opinions. This is one of the edit tensions with SPOV. Fair warning, orthomolecular subjects are not just some grab bag of "alt med" beliefs; in proper form they honor scientific principles more closely than the pharma editions' spin on *principles* - which the pharmas have striven to exclude others' legitimate data by re- & overdefinition rather than appropriately analyze and / or (re)test inconvenient data. Also one of the most poisonous ongoing problems in orthomed is the public's lack of access to accurate definitions and sources on the subject as well as non-commercially propelled views (I am speaking very broadly about pervasive commercial influences on popular & professional views). | |||
The fact is, vitamins are known to be effective and safe. They are essential nutrients, and when taken at the proper doses over a lifetime, are capable of preventing a wide variety of diseases. Because drug companies can't make big profits developing essential nutrients, they have a vested interest in agitating for the use of drugs and disparaging the use of nutritional supplements. | |||
The position you seem to be advocating overlooks several points: | |||
:1. Most "megavitamin critic fans" simply do not know what constitutes the technically based megavitamin therapy regimes - how much, what formulation, how often. The references given in ] and ] attempt to resolve that. The MV article provides the barest intelligible direction to references that should be high quality sources on the subject, its rationale and its practices. | |||
:2. This is also seems to be a problem with much purported mainstream testing, else how would they keep repeating multiply defective protocols, announcing their own failure as the molecules' failure decade in, decade out, unless of course, it was deliberate? (I have actual experience weeding out scientific error and misconduct by academics) Those familiar with nice oranges kind of look contemptuously at mushy apples. Outside claims that fail to recognize and use correct regimes should be considered irrelevant or low priority at best, especially if they have rejected repeated prior notice by a year or a decade or more. | |||
:3. Canards and counterfactual claims, believed by the majority or not, fundamentally fall into a different position and priority. Certain MV & orthomed critics have begun to run afoul of this recognition. | |||
(Orthomolecular Medicine News Service editor Andrew W. Saul taught nutrition, health science and cell biology at the college level, and has published over 100 reviews and editorials in peer-reviewed publications. He is author or coauthor of ten books and is featured in the documentary film Food Matters. His website is http://www.doctoryourself.com .) | |||
Finally there are legitimate controversies, but they are often not what or where most critics say they are. The current article is an attempt to yield a succinct World Book level article. Constructive comments or edits are welcome.--] 07:25, 8 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
References: | |||
:Sir, you continue to miss the point. NPOV is not just about what an article includes, but what it omits. The mainstream view needs to be included in the introduction. The article consists of a variety of assertions about the therapy that go unrebutted; a segregated section that mentions the mainstream view, but buries it with a lot of qualifications that shade the argument in the minority-view's direction; and a series of links where the legitimate medicine is left undistinguished from the illegitimate. You continue to argue this on the merits, but that fundamentally misunderstands ]. Please read the guideline already and stop this arguing in circles about matters entirely irrelevant to what I'm talking about. -- ] 12:15, 8 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
1. Klein EA, Thompson Jr, IM, Tangen CM et al. JAMA. 2011;306(14):1549-1556. http://jama.ama-assn.org/content/306/14/1549 | |||
2. Fawzi WW, Msamanga GI, Spiegelman D, Wei R, Kapiga S, Villamor E, Mwakagile D, Mugusi F, Hertzmark E, Essex M, Hunter DJ. A randomized trial of multivitamin supplements and HIV disease progression and mortality. N Engl J Med. 2004 Jul 1;351(1):23-32. | |||
I will be very interested to see your sources, which items you class as mere "assertions" and what you present as "mainstream". As I said before, constructive comments and criticism are welcome, I simply have been very wary since you used three POV trigger words with unfortunate associated histories here at Wiki, lack of response to my basic points, and your claims to NPOV. As for "legitimate medicine...undistinguished from the illegitimate," this is all legit in my state and probably most of the NMD/ND licensure states. I would recommend trying any "views" in Controversy first. This article best serves the general readership as a concise, descriptive, factual article because an accurate, substantial summation is so hard to find. I am not afraid to acknowledge disagreements in an appropriate manner and place. As for NPOV, the health & medical articles have frequently used a format that allows substantial presentation of the basic concepts, subject description and background before the interjected politics are added or farmed out to a more specialized article.--] 23:41, 8 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
3. Associated Press, Oct 17, 2006. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15305033/ | |||
I am pitching FRCP11's tagging, see '''''' at Orthomed as well as tag Talk at and above, .--] 12:40, 9 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
4. Null G, Dean C, Feldman M, Rasio D. Death by medicine. J Orthomolecular Med, 2005. 20: 1, 21-34. http://orthomolecular.org/library/jom/2005/pdf/2005-v20n01-p021.pdf | |||
5. The Associated Press. Drug errors injure more than 1.5 million a year. July 20, 2006. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13954142 | |||
===POV retag=== | |||
Looking for specific improvements, cogent comments, or at least factual challenges, to justify continuance of the ((NPOV)) & ((expert)) tags.--] 12:13, 1 July 2006 (UTC) | |||
6. Leape LL. Institute of Medicine medical error figures are not exaggerated. JAMA, 2000. Jul 5;284(1):95-7; Leape LL. Error in medicine. JAMA, 1994. Dec 21;272(23):1851-7; Lazarou J, Pomeranz BH, Corey PN. Incidence of adverse drug reactions in hospitalized patients: a meta-analysis of prospective studies. JAMA, 1998. Apr 15;279(15):1200-5. | |||
7. Fox M. Daily aspirin use linked with pancreatic cancer. Reuters, Oct 27, 2003. http://www.cnn.com/2003/HEALTH/10/27/cancer.aspirin.reut/index.html | |||
DEATHS FROM VITAMINS? | |||
== RFC:Restore the POV tag == | |||
The American Association of Poison Control Centers, which maintains the USA’s national database from 61 poison control centers, indicates that even including intentional and accidental misuse, the number of vitamin fatalities is less than one death per year. http://www.doctoryourself.com/vitsafety.html | |||
Megavitamin therapy is quackery, and widely criticized by leading scientists, but one would not know this at all from this POV-pushing page. -- ] 19:24, 7 August 2006 (UTC) | |||
:The Wiki "Orthomolecular medicine" article has long linked the QW page, I put it there myself in January when I redid the OM reference section. Barret is not a leading scientist or even an expert source according to recent court declarations, his dated article qualifies as a *sentiment* and a disputed technical position in science at Wiki. The generalzed statement that "megavitamin therapy is quackery" is an easy to factually contradict statement already heavily counterexampled in the text of the megavitamin article. A megavitamin therapy even long accepted for conventional medicine is vitamin B3 (niacin). Vitamin C is seriously under medicial & scientific study for cancer again, PNAS(2006) because of the previous "errors" and omissions against hard data. Within the med schools themselves, vitamin D is is the slow process of transition of megavitamin, from 200 IU a decade ago to some intermediate value, 1000-4000 IU strongly pushed by the actual medical researchers, well under the sunlit human production values of 10,000 - 50000 IU per day. This is just for starters, read the talk page here and at Orthomolecular medicine. So the quackery statement falls, the QW ref is long referenced at orthomed, and it is incorporated by linked orthomed reference to "Megavitamin therapy". '''No basis''' for the tag has been shown.--] 22:07, 7 August 2006 (UTC) | |||
And, it turns out, that there is NO documented evidence that any one of those alleged "deaths" was due to a vitamin. No evidence whatsoever. http://www.doctoryourself.com/vitsafety.html | |||
Drugs, however, are an entirely different matter: | |||
“Harmful reactions to some of the most widely used medicines — from insulin to a common antibiotic — sent more than 700,000 Americans to emergency rooms each year, landmark government research shows.” (Associated Press, Oct 17, 2006) http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15305033/ | |||
::The basis for the tag is that you persist in censoring relevant information that disagrees with your POV. | |||
VITAMIN BASHING IS NONSENSE | |||
::] says "The lead section should provide a clear and concise introduction to an article's topic, establishing context, and defining the terms. It should contain several paragraphs, depending on the length of the article, and should provide an overview of the main points the article will make, summarizing the primary reasons the subject matter is interesting or notable, and '''including a mention of its notable controversies'''." The most notable fact about megavitamin theory is that it is dangerous, objected to by leading scientists, and widely criticized. Yet, not only has this been deleted from the lead paragraph by your , but it has been deleted from the article all together. -- ] 23:00, 7 August 2006 (UTC) | |||
The news media can be absolutely relied on to trumpet any allegation that vitamins are harmful. Vitamin E has been accused of actually causing deaths. Even multivitamins have been accused of causing deaths. | |||
Baloney. | |||
:::Per your note, I improved the first paragraph accordingly. Your self statements clearly identify you as a very strong believer of "Brother Stephen" and his particular POV. And that's fine. However, here, and at orthomed, contentional or "conventional" medical pov, is not the last word or an automatic genuflect. We have attempted to resolve things logically, with quality references with a substantial nod to generalized scientific priority. It does turn out that some highly contentious editors can't find or at least present references that give precedence to their claims to superior priority but have been simply argumentative (surprise!). Criticized vociferously by *some* of the population, yes. Orthomed megavitamin therapies dangerous ? Which way? With respect to conventional medicine, such apprehensions are discussed in both articles' talk pages, the orthomed article and elsewhere. The orthomed article is actually still being '''generous''' in terms of SPOV. '''Censorship?''' Show up with howlingly ignorant statements & POV, persist in the face of high quality references and the barest reason, and yes, several editors have worn out their welcome - even from Misplaced Pages and from other doctors. Reason, references and careful, respectful edits *are* welcome.--] 00:38, 8 August 2006 (UTC) | |||
What Kind of Medical Study Would Have Grandma Believe that Her Daily Multivitamin is Dangerous? | |||
Orthomolecular Medicine News Service, October 12, 2011 | |||
::::Such edits are clearly not welcome on this welcome, because they keep getting deleted, and I keep getting ] by an anonymous editor who engages in edit wars and improperly removes POV tags. -- ] 19:42, 9 August 2006 (UTC) | |||
by Robert G. Smith, PhD | |||
(OMNS, Oct 12, 2011) A newly released study suggests that multivitamin and nutrient supplements can increase the mortality rate in older women . However, there are several concerns about the study's methods and significance. | |||
• The study was observational, in which participants filled out a survey about their eating habits and their use of supplements. It reports only a small increase in overall mortality (1%) from those taking multivitamins. This is a small effect, not much larger than would be expected by chance. Generalizing from such a small effect is not scientific. | |||
•The study actually reported that taking supplements of B-complex, vitamins C, D, E, and calcium and magnesium were associated with a lower risk of mortality. But this was not emphasized in the abstract, leading the non-specialist to think that all supplements were associated with mortality. The report did not determine the amounts of vitamin and nutrient supplements taken, nor whether they were artificial or natural. Further, most of the association with mortality came from the use of iron and copper supplements, which are known to be potentially inflammatory and toxic when taken by older people, because they tend to accumulate in the body . The risk from taking iron supplements should not be generalized to imply that all vitamin and nutrient supplements are harmful. | |||
•The study lacks scientific plausibility for several reasons. It tabulated results from surveys of 38,000 older women, based on their recall of what they ate over an 18-year period. But they were only surveyed 3 times during that period, relying only on their memory of what foods and supplements they took. This factor alone causes the study to be unreliable. | |||
• Some of these women smoked (~15%) or had previously (~35%), some drank alcohol (~45%), some had high blood pressure (~40%), and many of them developed heart disease and/or cancer. Some preexisting medical conditions were taken into account by adjusting the risk factors, but this caused the study to contradict what we already know about efficacy of supplements. For example, the study reports an increase in mortality from taking vitamin D, when adjusted for several health-relevant factors. However, vitamin D has recently been clearly shown to be helpful in preventing heart disease and many types of cancer , which are major causes of death. Furthermore, supplement users were twice as likely to be on hormone replacement therapy, which is a more plausible explanation for increased mortality than taking supplements. | |||
::::From the ]: | |||
•The effect of doctor recommendations was not taken into account. By their own repeated admissions, medical doctors and hospital nutritionists are more likely to recommend a daily multivitamin, and only a multivitamin, for their sicker patients. The study did not take this into account. All it did was tabulate deaths and attempt to correct the numbers for some prior health conditions. The numbers reported do not reflect other factors such as developing disease, side effects of pharmaceutical prescriptions, or other possible causes for the mortality. The study only reports statistical correlations, and gives no plausible cause for a claimed increase in mortality from multivitamin supplements. | |||
•The effect of education was not taken into account. When a doctor gives advice about illnesses, well-educated people will often respond by trying to be proactive. Some will take drugs prescribed by the doctor, and some will try to eat a better diet, including supplements of vitamins and nutrients. This is suggested by the study itself: the supplement users in the survey had more education than those who did not take supplements. It seems likely, therefore, the participants who got sick were more likely to have taken supplements. Because those who got sick are also more likely to die, it stands to reason that they would also be more likely to have taken supplements. This effect is purely statistical; it does not represent an increase in risk that taking supplements of vitamins and essential nutrients will cause disease or death. This type of statistical correlation is very common in observational health studies and those who are health-conscious should not be confounded by it. | |||
•The known safety of vitamin and nutrient supplements when taken at appropriate doses was not taken into account. The participants most likely took a simple multivitamin tablet, which contains low doses. Much higher doses are also safe , implying that the low doses in common multivitamin tablets are very safe. Further, because each individual requires different amounts of vitamins and nutrients, some people must take much higher doses for best health . | |||
Summary: In an observational study of older women in good health, it was said that those who died were more likely to have taken multivitamin and nutrient supplements than those who did not. The effect was small, and does not indicate any reason for disease or death. Instead, the study's methods suggest that people who have serious health conditions take vitamin and mineral supplements because they know that supplements can help. Indeed, the study showed a benefit from taking B-complex, C, D, and E vitamins, and calcium and magnesium. Therefore, if those wanting better health would take appropriate doses of supplements regularly, they would likely continue to achieve better health and longer life. | |||
(Robert G. Smith is Research Associate Professor, University of Pennsylvania Department of Neuroscience. He is a member of the Institute for Neurological Sciences and the author of several dozen scientific papers and reviews.) | |||
::::==== Pseudoscience ==== | |||
:::::''How are we to write articles about ], about which majority scientific opinion is that the ] opinion is not credible and doesn't even really deserve serious mention?'' | |||
References: | |||
:::::If we're going to represent the sum total of human knowledge, then we must concede that we will be describing views repugnant to us without asserting that they are false. Things are not, however, as bad as that sounds. The task before us is not to describe disputes as though, for example, pseudoscience were on a par with science; rather, the task is to '''represent the majority (scientific) view as the majority view and the minority (sometimes pseudoscientific) view as the minority view'''; and, moreover, to explain how scientists have received pseudoscientific theories. This is all in the purview of the task of ''describing a dispute fairly.'' | |||
Mursu J, Robien K, Harnack LJ, Park K, Jacobs DR Jr (2011) Dietary supplements and mortality rate in older women. The Iowa Women's Health Study. Arch Intern Med. 171(18):1625-1633. | |||
Emery, T. F. Iron and your Health: Facts and Fallacies. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, 1991. | |||
Fairbanks, V. F. "Iron in Medicine and Nutrition." Chapter 10 in Modern Nutrition in Health and Disease, editors M. E. Shils, J. A. Olson, M. Shike, et al., 9th ed. Baltimore, MD: Williams & Wilkins, 1999. | |||
Hoffer, A., A. W. Saul. Orthomolecular Medicine for Everyone: Megavitamin Therapeutics for Families and Physicians. Laguna Beach, CA: Basic Health Publications, 2008. | |||
Parker J, Hashmi O, Dutton D, Mavrodaris A, Stranges S, Kandala NB, Clarke A, Franco OH. Levels of vitamin D and cardiometabolic disorders: systematic review and meta-analysis. Maturitas. 2010 Mar;65(3):225-36. | |||
:::::Pseudoscience can be seen as a social phenomenon and therefore significant. However, pseudoscience should not obfuscate the description of the main views, and any mention should be proportional to the rest of the article. | |||
Lappe JM, Travers-Gustafson D, Davies KM, Recker RR, Heaney RP. Vitamin D and calcium supplementation reduces cancer risk: results of a randomized trial. Am J Clin Nutr. 2007 Jun;85(6):1586-91. | |||
Padayatty SJ, Sun AY, Chen Q, Espey MG, Drisko J, Levine M. Vitamin C: intravenous use by complementary and alternative medicine practitioners and adverse effects. PLoS One. 2010 Jul 7;5(7):e11414. | |||
Williams RJ, Deason G. (1967) Individuality in vitamin C needs. Proc Natl Acad SciUSA.57:16381641. | |||
Also of Interest: | |||
Orthomolecular Medicine News Service, April 29, 2010. Multivitamins Dangerous? Latest News from the World Headquarters Of Pharmaceutical Politicians, Educators and Reporters. http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v06n15.shtml | |||
HERE IS A SOURCE for reliable information from a publication that is peer-reviewed by a panel of 20 nutritionally-minded researchers and doctors who are in favor of vitamin supplementation: http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/index.shtml] (]) 09:13, 9 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::The article fails to adhere to the NPOV guidelines because it emphasizes the minority viewpoint over the majority viewpoint. -- ] 19:45, 9 August 2006 (UTC) | |||
:I see you didn't bother taking my advice on walls of text. Look, I'm just telling you how it is: editors are not going to spend 20 minutes reading a single post, it's just not gonna happen. If you don't tune it down then you'll likely be ignored. Secondly, quackwatch is absolutely considered an ]; consensus on this was formed long, long ago and it stretches across the entire project wrt psuedo and fringe science. ] ] 09:18, 9 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::You persist in an ad hominem word usage when it has been explained, crystal clear, by previously uninvolved editors (linas and Michael C Price) that it is not "ps". This alone makes you look like a POV warrior. Your primary source of "knowledge" seems to be the polemics of "Brother Stephen" et al, an effective and unfortunately popular writer in certain anticompetitive quarters with dated and heavy handed prose that is not aging well in science or court (I have been thinking about when I first began reading the Readers Digest about the Lehigh High Valley... so it must be mid to late 70s. I still read his bios on alt med credentials, the most complete dirt). You simply don't seem to know what "science" is. Before the waters of progress smooth it over, science gets messy as hell and orthomed is in the thick of that transition. Orthomed is actually founded on a technical foundation that was well ahead of conventional medicine in a number of ways (orthomed was born molecular, conventional medicine was not, and on review seems to have spent much of the 20th century resisting it, starting around 1900). In part due to being upstaged, conventional medicine is now scurrying madly to reassert dominance and control with greater science requirements, u/g research and generally monopolizing the kids' time between 19 & 27. Little time is left for independent thought, much less scientific (vs even dogmatic) nutrition courses. I am going by Boston and New Haven this weekend, think I should spoil a birthday party with a host biotech MD regarding this?--] 04:40, 10 August 2006 (UTC) | |||
::This is why wikipedia is inaccurate on what you call "pseudo"-science - because it is permeated with the information of people with agendas, who put forth falsehoods in an attempt to destroy opponents. To support Barett is somewhat immoral, actually, because you lend credence to toxic practices while attempting to undermine safe and effective alternatives. I decided upon a compromise. I have a revision of the article that includes all the criticisms, as well as some of the other information. Some information I put forth had no criticisms against it (e.g. - the study showing that supplementation dramatically helped AIDS patients, which is quite valid), yet it was still deleted. Deletion of such pertinent information is unjustified. | |||
::::::Neither linas nor MCP have applied the NPOV or LEAD standard to these articles. They've made factual arguments, but the standard for Misplaced Pages is verifiability. Misplaced Pages is not supposed to resolve the debate. It just reports the debate, so your insistence on "right" and "wrong" is irrelevant, even if you were right (and most doctors think you're not). Right now, this article doesn't fairly report the debate; worse, it doesn't fairly report the view of the majority of the scientific community. | |||
::What you call "pseudo"-science, particularly when it comes to these issues, is merely an effective alternative that undercuts the market shares of dominant institutions.] (]) 00:41, 10 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::Most doctors view megavitamin therapy as quackery and pseudoscience. They may or may not be correct, but ] requires that the majority viewpoint be reflected as the majority viewpoint. The standard for inclusion in Misplaced Pages is verifiability, and your attempting to argue that all of mainstream medicine is part of a conspiracy by doctors and pharmaceuticals to shut down orthomedicine is utterly irrelevant to the ] standard. | |||
::: Pottinger, you really need to be careful: 1. You have libeled ("huxterism") Barrett above (that's a crime), and definitely not allowed here. It also violates our ] policy, which applies to unsourced negative information about anyone living, including other editors, so be very careful. Sources for such information must be impeccably strong! 2. Only fringe sources criticize Barrett and Quackwatch. ALL mainstream scientific, medical, university, and government sources speak favorably of Barrett and Quackwatch, for which Barrett has received numerous awards. His detractors are all fringe, and often on the wrong side of the law. 3. longevitylibrary and doctoryourself are very fringe sources that are considered quite inaccurate, both about matters of health and about Quackwatch and Barrett. There is a reason why they are critical. They have products and ideas to sell. 4. Your use of primary sources violates ]. For scientific information we use large reviews of numerous studies, not single studies. 5. Conspiracy theories and antimedical propaganda will only get you identified as a proponent of fringe ideas and thus you risk getting blocked for "advocacy", something we don't allow here. 6. Stick to the point of the article and the purpose of the talk page. Don't mention other things. Keep it very short and to the point. Walls of text are considered disruptive. 7. Edit warring....don't do it. If you get reverted, don't try again. Immediately take it to the talk page and discuss the matter. 8. We already know about Big Pharma. Don't forget that Big Pharma is into vitamins in a big way, and that the vitamin and supplement industry are huge and have their own agendas which are every bit as "evil" as anything from Big Pharma. Don't be naive about that. -- ] (]) 08:10, 10 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::Quackwatch has done a nice job of summarizing the evidence against OM, but the fact of the matter is that it's the primary sources, not Quackwatch, that provides the damning argument against megavitamins and related issues. And Quackwatch is a heck of a lot more credible in my eyes than "orthomed.org", which you've been relying upon. What pseudoscience movement admits that they're pseudoscience? | |||
:::: The information put forth in longevitylibrary and doctoryourself that we are dealing with here is independently verifiable. It's "innacuracy" seems only to stem from the fact that it puts forth information contrary to your position. | |||
:::: The longevitylibrary criticism of Barrett is quite valid, and puts forth well documented points. It utterly eviscerates the foundations of the "Quackwatch" website: http://longevitylibrary.com/article/243.pdf | |||
:::: I highly recommend the above article, but also refer to the following: canlyme com/quackwatch.html | |||
:::: I will keep note of wikipedia policies. Thank you for reminding me of them. As for the other material - this is not a personal attack, but much of your argumentation is replete with the following logical fallacies: ] and ]. In this case, the authority is invalid - it is those who's ideology was largely created by people who thrived off of the largesses of the Rockefeller Foundation, a subversive organization that not only financed Nazi negative Eugenics programs, but also impacted American society in an extremely deleterious fashion. See the ] transcript (and notes on linked page) for more: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3683140/Reece-Committee-Hearings-TaxExempt-Foundations-1953 | |||
:::: The purveyors of these mainstream arguments, a little while ago, where destroying the career of Semmelweis. | |||
:::: One note though - there are several primary source studies cited on this article. They are, incidentally, in favor of one particular view. | |||
:::: Also, the studies I cited are consistent, and support each other. | |||
:::: Your comment on the "correctness" of Barrett's views can, in many cases, be shown to be invalid. For instance, Barrett is a major supporter of modern vaccines. Yet an examination of peer-reviewed studies from authoritative sources shows that not only can many vaccines be considered to be subtly lethal, but also a source for the proliferation of new diseases. See the following collection of 100 peer-reviewed studies: http://www.archive.org/details/HorrorOfVaccinationExposed | |||
:::: What that shows is that while standard pablum is put forth, the dark underbelly of the practice is carefully recorded, and obfuscated. | |||
:::: Similarly with fluoridation. Barrett is a vocal proponent of the practice. Yet the reality of fluoride being a poison was well known before it was put into the drinking water. The Journal of the American Medical Association noted, just before U.S. drinking water became fluoridated: "Fluorides are general protoplasmic poisons, probably because of their capacity to modify the metabolism of cells by changing the permeability of the cell membrane and by inhibiting certain enzyme systems ... The sources of fluorine intoxication are drinking water containing 1 ppm or more of fluorine, fluorine compounds used as insecticidal sprays for fruits and vegetables (cryolite and barium fluosilicate) and the mining and conversion of phosphate rock to superphosphate, which is used as fertilizer. The fluorine content of phosphate rock, about 25% of the fluorine present, is volatilized and represents a pouring into the atmosphere of approximately 25,000 tons of pure fluorine annually ... The known effects of chronic fluorine intoxication are those of hypophasia of the teeth, which has been called mottled enamel, and of bone sclerosis." - Journal of the American Medical Association, editorial, September 18, 1943 (123:50): http://jama.ama-assn.org/content/123/3/150.2.short | |||
:::: The following clip is an experiment exposing cells to Fluoride during the time period. It also shows that government knew about the dangers of fluoride during that time period: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v-g-o1PSvgI | |||
:::: For information on how this poison was marketed and the ADA bought up, see ''The Fluoride Deception'', which has been praised by Nobel Laureates like Dr. ]. | |||
:::: I would not consider Arvid Carlsson to be a fringe source.] (]) 06:50, 11 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::You've got alt med, vaccination and water fluoridation down, I'm guessing the next step will be AIDS denialism? I don't think I've seen that much fringe packed into a single post here. Speaking of ], I asked that you read this but it appears by virtue of the fact that you keep going on about fringe ideas that you either haven't or you're ignoring it or misunderstanding it. If you haven't read it please do, as I think it will help you understand how things are done here. ] ] 07:12, 11 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::Your comments are irrelevant to the content of my post, which is based on authoritative sources. Of course, it seems that on wikipedia a source is "authoritative" if it supports a currently popular idea, but if other items from that authoritative source refute a popular idea (e.g. - the JAMA article on fluoridation), they are deemed to be irrelevant.] (]) 07:17, 11 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
{{od}}I see ], ], ] and a whole lot of irrelevant tangents heavily seasoned with logical fallacies here. How does pharmaceutical companies selling ad space justify megavitamin therapy? Also, don't pharmaceutical companies ''make'' a lot of those vitamins, and make a handy profit since the vitamins don't require any R&D for either research on efficacy or on synthesis? Anyway, quackwatch is reliable, we're done here. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 03:27, 12 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
:The efficacy of megavitamin therapy is shown in the studies I have cited in my revision of the article. This was reverted since it did not fit the ideology of the other wikipedia users. They have not demonstrated that the sources I have used are in any way inaccurate. Furthermore, the studies were inappropriately weighted against vitamins, alleging "toxicity", when nobody has died from vitamins. In contrast, modern allopathic medicine is the 3rd leading cause of death in the United States: http://jama.ama-assn.org/content/284/4/483, http://www.health-care-reform.net/causedeath.htm | |||
:There has, instead, been much discussion about Quackwatch. But even if we focus on that, Barrett is not intellectually honest. See the following: http://longevitylibrary.com/article/243.pdf, canlyme com/quackwatch.html | |||
:People here seem to be merely adhering to what was already established on wikipedia without allowing for new input. For instance, the study I cited showing that high vitamin D levels alleviate schizophrenia symptoms validates the essential tenets of orthomolecular medicine. Yet such things are discounted in favor of outdated and irrelevant ideological claims. <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 07:07, 13 January 2012 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
::Quackwatch is a reliable ] source on wikipedia. | |||
::Alleged failings of real medicine doesn't mean megavitamin therapy works. | |||
::Misplaced Pages sticks closely to the mainstream scholarly opinion; within medicine, that makes orthomolecular and other types of megavitamin therapy a ] and the ] of the article is automatically tilted towards the mainstream. | |||
::Anyway, we're done. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 17:37, 13 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::It seems that no amount of pressing the point will change the view of the majority of editors against Quackwatch. I still present the sources I have cited as a means for editors who are interested in expanding their intellectual horizons. Also, the article, as it stands right now, seems to read like a hit-piece against Orthomolecular medicine, so I suggest, in the external links section, that a link to the Linus Pauling Institute Micronutrient Information Center be added as well as a link to Quackwatch, in order to not give an entirely biased presentation, and to present the reader with one of the more authoritative sources on the subject of Orthomolecular medicine: http://lpi.oregonstate.edu/infocenter/ | |||
:::I think that if Orthomolecular therapy is to be treated as a "minority" position, it should at least be treated as a ''significant'' minority position. A previous editor on this talk page said it best that "The day that science is about reaching consensus is the day that science has become religion." That said, there are several studies from mainstream medical journals challenging the notion that megavitamin therapy is ineffective. In addition, several government documents show extreme mineral deficiencies in soils, and that as a result there are widespread nutrient deficiencies in the general population. Also, other research shows that higher amounts than the recommended daily intake may be necessary for good health. This can be supported not only by individual studies, but also by metaanalyses and recent research. For instance, one of the studies I cited was quite recent, and lent massive support to the idea that Vitamin C is an effective agent in helping the body protect itself against the common cold. If the other editors believe that what I have presented is insufficient, I will provide more examples. There are many, many studies showing the effectiveness of vitamins in treating diseases. | |||
::::::I think your POV is utterly wrong and dangerous, and is the message of charlatans who should be barred from the practice of medicine and jailed for consumer fraud, but I recognize that WP:NPOV requires its inclusion in this article. But your position that your POV is the only POV that belongs in the article is simply false by the rules of Misplaced Pages. You can cite all the irrelevant studies about run-of-the-mill nutritional debates you want (which are irrelevant to what orthomedical proponents are pushing), but what you need to be citing are the Misplaced Pages standards you're not adhering to. Please read the ]. -- ] 05:13, 10 August 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::The failings of what you call "real" medicine are in no way alleged. They are admitted even by the Journal of the American Medical Association. | |||
It's nice when an encyclopedia article has actual, coherent, up to date information that readers can concisely trace a knowledgable thread of thought on a subject without disparagement, intimidation and fear tactics. The article you are writing is "Bro. Stephen trashes sinful Nobel laureates, godless rational thought, and most forms of evidence". I have to say, you are a true Believer. The world is bludgeoned by these outdated radical skeptic POV sites, that frequently cite cooked tests that did nothing to test the supposed hypothesis. You continually ignore the effect of priority from the latest major scientific papers in the area, you deny multiple distinguished scientists (in conventional pubs and institutions) their very work is even science. The parts you mention were addressed in much more muted tones as a general heads up, not the bash happy denial-of-all-who-disagree.--] 07:03, 10 August 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::In addition to what I have already noted, I would like to point out that there seems to be on this article a fearmongering against vitamins, suggesting alleged "toxicity". Nobody has died from Orthomolecular therapy. In contrast, in addition to so-called "real" medicine (which in very many cases is poisonous, unless it is used to treat traumas), the food most people eat is much more likely to cause severe health problems than anything caused by vitamins. For instance, GMO foods not only devastate environments (see the BBC article 'Trojan gene' could wipe out fish: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/545504.stm), but are also extremely dangerous to health. Countless studies show how GMO corn, soy, canola, etc., lead to organ damage. A meta-analysis, for example, stated the following: http://www.enveurope.com/content/23/1/10 | |||
:::"Results | |||
:::Several convergent data appear to indicate liver and kidney problems as end points of GMO diet effects in the above-mentioned experiments. This was confirmed by our meta-analysis of all the in vivo studies published, which revealed that the kidneys were particularly affected, concentrating 43.5% of all disrupted parameters in males, whereas the liver was more specifically disrupted in females (30.8% of all disrupted parameters) " | |||
:::There are countless more examples further showing the problems with this. | |||
:::(An overview, providing information on how GMO foods induce everything from sterility to organ damage, can be read here: http://responsibletechnology.org/docs/145.pdf) | |||
:::Jeffrey Smith, the author of that overview, has been attacked for a larger book which incorporates some of that information. He wrote the following article concerning those attacks, in a Huffington Post article: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jeffrey-smith/pseudo-scientific-defense_b_528477.html | |||
:::"When I wrote Genetic Roulette, I collaborated with more than 30 scientists, referenced hundreds of publications, and had each of the 65 health risks reviewed by at least three scientists. We all did our very best to make sure the information was accurate and up-to-date. I will likewise take the time necessary to prepare proper responses to Chassy and Tribe's arguments. Look for them on my Huffington Post blog." | |||
:::The reader will find some of this permeated throughout the blog: feed://www.huffingtonpost.com/author/index.php?author=jeffrey-smith | |||
:::And genetic modification of corn and soy so that it resists the popular herbicide Roundup (glyphosate), is creating new gut destroying pathogens, according to the research of professor Don Huber.: http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/02/24/us-monsanto-roundup-idUSTRE71N4XN20110224 | |||
:::Glyphosate has been linked to all kinds of environmental and health problems in previous peer-reviewed literature.: <!-- unlinked to help with abuse monitoring --><nowiki>http://www.greenmedinfo.com/toxic-ingredient/roundup-herbicide] (]) 06:53, 14 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::I completely fail to see how GMO fish having an impact on the environment helps the idea that somehow megavitamin therapy is effective. Ditto for Roundup. How exactly would we use these sources on the page, assuming they were adequately reliable? Which they aren't. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 18:34, 14 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::I was just making a point about anti-vitamin scares. I am aware that it is a tangent, and will refrain from using tangents in the future. <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 06:19, 15 January 2012 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
{{collapse bottom}} | |||
==Revert to talk page== | |||
I've replaced the talk page information, tags and templaets <s>removed by Pottinger's cats over the past couple days</s>. I believe all the new information was retained. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 03:19, 12 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
:I am unaware of removing what you said I removed. Please provide evidence I did this before making such accusations.] (]) 10:13, 14 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
::Oops, you're right. Looks like BullRanger did it . The above section should be archived anyway, I'll take care of it. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 18:29, 14 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
== Biased selection of studies == | |||
This article selects relatively few studies, and primarily those supporting its agenda. For example, consider this article and all the studies it refers to ... | |||
http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2008/apr2008_Newly-Discovered-Benefits-Of-Vitamin-C_01.htm?source=search&key=vitamin%20c | |||
] (]) 23:22, 3 April 2014 (UTC) | |||
:You need to read ]. ] (]) 23:29, 3 April 2014 (UTC) | |||
::There are 58 cited references in the linked document. Which of them do not measure up in your opinion and why? ] (]) 09:58, 4 April 2014 (UTC) | |||
:::That's not how it works. Life extension magazine fails ]. If you think that any of those citations should be used, tell us what change you think should be made to this article and give us a MEDRS-compliant citation supporting the requested change. Do that and we will evaluate the source and your suggested change. ''That'' is what you need to do to make changes to Wikimedia medical articles. Accusations of bias and agendas are not helpful. We need reliable sources. --] (]) 15:55, 4 April 2014 (UTC) | |||
Yes, the statement "evidence in favour of vitamin supplementation supports only doses in the normal range" cannot be made by anyone who has not read every single research paper on such. I suggest people read what is said at http://lifeextension.com and note the many thousands of valid research studies in support of mega-vitamin treatment and other such supplementation. My personal experience is that 75gm of IV vitamin C each fortnight has lowered my PSA, thus avoiding the need for radiotherapy. <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 01:21, 14 October 2016 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
== My individual case == | |||
...for what it's worth. | |||
First, I'd like to say I'm in favor of mega vitamin therapy in general. My achilles tendons both ruptured after misuse. Nothing helped for six months. | |||
Then, reasoning that tendons are made with collagen and collagen with vitamin C, I tried one gram of vitamin C every hour. | |||
In two days my Achilles were healed. | |||
However...my psychiatrist prescribed me 5mg of folic acid daily for depression. This is 14.5 times the recommended daily allowance. | |||
I believe the result was a polyp in my rectum. This was about to turn cancerous. It was removed. I did not stop taking the folic acid. The growth returned. | |||
I read that folic acid can cause intestinal growths, so I stopped. | |||
That was nine years ago and the growth has not come back. | |||
Incidentally "folic acid" is the artificial form of folate. Folate is difficult to overdose with. | |||
Yes this is "original research". But I hope it's of help.] (]) 20:53, 6 October 2014 (UTC) | |||
:Anecdote is outweighed by evidence (by far). Also, this is not a forum to discuss your own subjective experience. This is a place to discuss the article and propose specific changes in order to improve it. Thank you. ] (]) 03:35, 14 August 2019 (UTC) | |||
== External links modified (January 2018) == | |||
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== Downgraded from B-class to Start. == | |||
Some of the literature is primary (individual clinical trials), other, outdated. ] (]) 00:18, 21 August 2018 (UTC) | |||
:Revised since the downgrade. Other editor should decide if worthy of upgrading to C-class. ] (]) 12:40, 22 August 2018 (UTC) | |||
::COI disclosure: Currently I am self-employed as a science consultant to companies in the dietary supplement, performance nutrition and functional food industries. I am not receiving payments from clients for making changes to Misplaced Pages entries (and have not, and will not). NO PAID EDITING. None of my clients are aware of my Misplaced Pages activities, and none have ever asked me to create or edit Misplaced Pages entries. My intentions are to maintain a neutral point of view while improving the quality of writing and referencing in this article. ] (]) 10:45, 17 January 2018 (UTC) | |||
== Why does an article on mega vitamin therapy not mention the work of Nobel prize winning scientist, Linus Pauling? == | |||
Why does an article on mega vitamin therapy not mention the work of Nobel prize winning scientist, Linus Pauling? | |||
In particular, since the article implied that mega vitamin terapy was only researched/practised by alternative therapists/practitioners, when that is obviously and grossly false. | |||
Many other legitimate scientists and doctors have researched and practised mega vitamin therapy, so are you beling deliberatly disingenuous or just too lazy to do any research beyond or outside your intiial OPINION? <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 00:16, 23 April 2020 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
:I'm going to guess that's because it was proven in the 80s that he was wrong about it. ] (]) 00:47, 27 June 2023 (UTC) |
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falsehoods in Megavitamin therapy articleI have detailed my arguments in the history section. "Quackwatch" is not reliable: http://longevitylibrary.com/article/243.pdf Of course people have not viewed that article. What it shows is that Barett frequently engages in character assasinations, does not have an authoritative background (he was a bit of a failure until he got into his recent bit of hucksterism), that there are a plethora of peer reviewed studies on Pubmed supporting CAM, that there are authoritative sources completely refuting Barett on many of his major points, and that he has shamelessly libeled his opponents, as exposed in court cases. It uses facsimilies of primary documents from a recent court case to prove it's point. For the various vitamin citations, I have given mainstream medical publications that refute the other arguments. The citation on Schizophrenia shows that vitamins do indeed help prevent mental illness - hence refuting the fundamental objections to orthomolecular medicine. For some reason, the "doctor yourself" website has been deemed "unreliable". Hoaxers like Stephen Barett are given ample space. Nevertheless, the doctor yourself website has an excellent overview of this insanity. I will post just the beginning of the article: http://www.doctoryourself.com/safety.html By golly, Lincoln was right. You really can fool some of the people all of the time. When the topic is vitamins, some of the most easily fooled are news broadcasters and newspaper reporters. IF YOU HAVE RECENTLY HEARD THAT VITAMINS ARE HARMFUL, you may want to read this page, or at least as much of it as you need to get your perspective back.
How to Make People Believe Any Anti-Vitamin Scare It Just Takes Lots of Pharmaceutical Industry Cash by Andrew W. Saul, Orthomolecular Medicine News Service, October 20, 2011 Recent much trumpeted anti-vitamin news is the product of pharmaceutical company payouts. No, this is not one of "those" conspiracy theories. Here's how it's done: 1) Cash to study authors. Many of the authors of a recent negative vitamin E paper (1) have received substantial income from the pharmaceutical industry. The names are available in the last page of the paper (1556) in the "Conflict of Interest" section. You will not see them in the brief summary at the JAMA website. A number of the study authors have received money from pharmaceutical companies, including Merck, Pfizer, Sanofi-Aventis, AstraZeneca, Abbott, GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, Amgen, Firmagon, and Novartis. 2) Advertising revenue. Many popular magazines and almost all major medical journals receive income from the pharmaceutical industry. The only question is, how much? Pick up a copy of the publication and count the pharmaceutical ads. The more space sold, the more revenue for the publication. If you try to find their advertisement revenue, you'll see that they don't disclose it. So, just count the Pharma ads. Look in them all: Readers Digest http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v06n11.shtml , JAMA, Newsweek, Time, AARP Today, NEJM, Archives of Pediatrics. Even Prevention magazine. Practically any major periodical. 3) Rigged trials. Yes, it is true and yes it is provable. In a recent editorial, we explained how trials of new drugs are often rigged at http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v04n20.shtml . Studies of the health benefits of vitamins and essential nutrients also appear to be rigged. This can be easily done by using low doses to guarantee a negative result, and by biasing the interpretation to show a statistical increase in risk. 4) Bias in what is published, or rejected for publication. The largest and most popular medical journals receive very large income from pharmaceutical advertising. Peer-reviewed research indicates that this influences what they print, and even what study authors conclude from their data. http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v05n02.shtml . 5) Censorship of what is indexed and available to doctors and the public. Public tax money pays for censorship in the largest public medical library on the planet: the US National Library of Medicine (MEDLINE/PubMed). http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v06n03.shtml. See also: http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v06n05.shtml. Don't Believe It? How well were these pro-vitamin, anti-drug studies covered in the mass media? •A Harvard study showed a 27% reduction in AIDS deaths among patients given vitamin supplements. (2) •There have been no deaths from vitamins in 27 years. http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v07n05.shtml •Antibiotics cause 700,000 emergency room visits per year, just in the US. (3) •Modern drug-and-cut medicine is at least the third leading cause of death in the USA. Some estimates place medicine as the number one cause of death. (4) •Over 1.5 million Americans are injured every year by drug errors in hospitals, doctors' offices, and nursing homes. If in a hospital, a patient can expect at least one medication error every single day. (5) •More than 100,000 patients die every year, just in the US, from drugs properly prescribed and taken as directed. (6) Double Standard Countless comedians have made fun of the incompetent physician who, when called late at night during a life- threatening disease crisis, says, "take two aspirin and call me in the morning." It's no longer funny. One of the largest pharmaceutical conglomerates in the world ran prime- time national television commercials that declared: "Bayer aspirin may actually help stop you from dying if you take it during a heart attack." The company also promotes such use of its product on the Internet. http://www.wonderdrug.com/ , formerly http://www.bayeraspirin.com/news/heart_attack.htm Daily Aspirin Use Linked With Pancreatic Cancer Here's something you may have not seen. Research has shown that women who take just one aspirin a day, "which millions do to prevent heart attack and stroke as well as to treat headaches - may raise their risk of getting deadly pancreatic cancer. . . . Pancreatic cancer affects only 31,000 Americans a year, but it kills virtually all its victims within three years. The study of 88,000 nurses found that those who took two or more aspirins a week for 20 years or more had a 58 percent higher risk of pancreatic cancer." (7) Women who took two or more aspirin tablets per day had an alarming 86 percent greater risk of pancreatic cancer. Study author Dr. Eva Schernhammer of Harvard Medical School was quoted as saying: "Apart from smoking, this is one of the few risk factors that have been identified for pancreatic cancer. Initially we expected that aspirin would protect against pancreatic cancer." How about that. Say: What if there was one, just one case of pancreatic cancer caused by a vitamin? What do you think the press would have said about that? The fact is, vitamins are known to be effective and safe. They are essential nutrients, and when taken at the proper doses over a lifetime, are capable of preventing a wide variety of diseases. Because drug companies can't make big profits developing essential nutrients, they have a vested interest in agitating for the use of drugs and disparaging the use of nutritional supplements. (Orthomolecular Medicine News Service editor Andrew W. Saul taught nutrition, health science and cell biology at the college level, and has published over 100 reviews and editorials in peer-reviewed publications. He is author or coauthor of ten books and is featured in the documentary film Food Matters. His website is http://www.doctoryourself.com .) References: 1. Klein EA, Thompson Jr, IM, Tangen CM et al. JAMA. 2011;306(14):1549-1556. http://jama.ama-assn.org/content/306/14/1549 2. Fawzi WW, Msamanga GI, Spiegelman D, Wei R, Kapiga S, Villamor E, Mwakagile D, Mugusi F, Hertzmark E, Essex M, Hunter DJ. A randomized trial of multivitamin supplements and HIV disease progression and mortality. N Engl J Med. 2004 Jul 1;351(1):23-32. 3. Associated Press, Oct 17, 2006. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15305033/ 4. Null G, Dean C, Feldman M, Rasio D. Death by medicine. J Orthomolecular Med, 2005. 20: 1, 21-34. http://orthomolecular.org/library/jom/2005/pdf/2005-v20n01-p021.pdf 5. The Associated Press. Drug errors injure more than 1.5 million a year. July 20, 2006. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13954142 6. Leape LL. Institute of Medicine medical error figures are not exaggerated. JAMA, 2000. Jul 5;284(1):95-7; Leape LL. Error in medicine. JAMA, 1994. Dec 21;272(23):1851-7; Lazarou J, Pomeranz BH, Corey PN. Incidence of adverse drug reactions in hospitalized patients: a meta-analysis of prospective studies. JAMA, 1998. Apr 15;279(15):1200-5. 7. Fox M. Daily aspirin use linked with pancreatic cancer. Reuters, Oct 27, 2003. http://www.cnn.com/2003/HEALTH/10/27/cancer.aspirin.reut/index.html DEATHS FROM VITAMINS? The American Association of Poison Control Centers, which maintains the USA’s national database from 61 poison control centers, indicates that even including intentional and accidental misuse, the number of vitamin fatalities is less than one death per year. http://www.doctoryourself.com/vitsafety.html And, it turns out, that there is NO documented evidence that any one of those alleged "deaths" was due to a vitamin. No evidence whatsoever. http://www.doctoryourself.com/vitsafety.html Drugs, however, are an entirely different matter: “Harmful reactions to some of the most widely used medicines — from insulin to a common antibiotic — sent more than 700,000 Americans to emergency rooms each year, landmark government research shows.” (Associated Press, Oct 17, 2006) http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15305033/ VITAMIN BASHING IS NONSENSE The news media can be absolutely relied on to trumpet any allegation that vitamins are harmful. Vitamin E has been accused of actually causing deaths. Even multivitamins have been accused of causing deaths. Baloney. What Kind of Medical Study Would Have Grandma Believe that Her Daily Multivitamin is Dangerous? Orthomolecular Medicine News Service, October 12, 2011 by Robert G. Smith, PhD (OMNS, Oct 12, 2011) A newly released study suggests that multivitamin and nutrient supplements can increase the mortality rate in older women . However, there are several concerns about the study's methods and significance. • The study was observational, in which participants filled out a survey about their eating habits and their use of supplements. It reports only a small increase in overall mortality (1%) from those taking multivitamins. This is a small effect, not much larger than would be expected by chance. Generalizing from such a small effect is not scientific. •The study actually reported that taking supplements of B-complex, vitamins C, D, E, and calcium and magnesium were associated with a lower risk of mortality. But this was not emphasized in the abstract, leading the non-specialist to think that all supplements were associated with mortality. The report did not determine the amounts of vitamin and nutrient supplements taken, nor whether they were artificial or natural. Further, most of the association with mortality came from the use of iron and copper supplements, which are known to be potentially inflammatory and toxic when taken by older people, because they tend to accumulate in the body . The risk from taking iron supplements should not be generalized to imply that all vitamin and nutrient supplements are harmful. •The study lacks scientific plausibility for several reasons. It tabulated results from surveys of 38,000 older women, based on their recall of what they ate over an 18-year period. But they were only surveyed 3 times during that period, relying only on their memory of what foods and supplements they took. This factor alone causes the study to be unreliable. • Some of these women smoked (~15%) or had previously (~35%), some drank alcohol (~45%), some had high blood pressure (~40%), and many of them developed heart disease and/or cancer. Some preexisting medical conditions were taken into account by adjusting the risk factors, but this caused the study to contradict what we already know about efficacy of supplements. For example, the study reports an increase in mortality from taking vitamin D, when adjusted for several health-relevant factors. However, vitamin D has recently been clearly shown to be helpful in preventing heart disease and many types of cancer , which are major causes of death. Furthermore, supplement users were twice as likely to be on hormone replacement therapy, which is a more plausible explanation for increased mortality than taking supplements. •The effect of doctor recommendations was not taken into account. By their own repeated admissions, medical doctors and hospital nutritionists are more likely to recommend a daily multivitamin, and only a multivitamin, for their sicker patients. The study did not take this into account. All it did was tabulate deaths and attempt to correct the numbers for some prior health conditions. The numbers reported do not reflect other factors such as developing disease, side effects of pharmaceutical prescriptions, or other possible causes for the mortality. The study only reports statistical correlations, and gives no plausible cause for a claimed increase in mortality from multivitamin supplements. •The effect of education was not taken into account. When a doctor gives advice about illnesses, well-educated people will often respond by trying to be proactive. Some will take drugs prescribed by the doctor, and some will try to eat a better diet, including supplements of vitamins and nutrients. This is suggested by the study itself: the supplement users in the survey had more education than those who did not take supplements. It seems likely, therefore, the participants who got sick were more likely to have taken supplements. Because those who got sick are also more likely to die, it stands to reason that they would also be more likely to have taken supplements. This effect is purely statistical; it does not represent an increase in risk that taking supplements of vitamins and essential nutrients will cause disease or death. This type of statistical correlation is very common in observational health studies and those who are health-conscious should not be confounded by it. •The known safety of vitamin and nutrient supplements when taken at appropriate doses was not taken into account. The participants most likely took a simple multivitamin tablet, which contains low doses. Much higher doses are also safe , implying that the low doses in common multivitamin tablets are very safe. Further, because each individual requires different amounts of vitamins and nutrients, some people must take much higher doses for best health . Summary: In an observational study of older women in good health, it was said that those who died were more likely to have taken multivitamin and nutrient supplements than those who did not. The effect was small, and does not indicate any reason for disease or death. Instead, the study's methods suggest that people who have serious health conditions take vitamin and mineral supplements because they know that supplements can help. Indeed, the study showed a benefit from taking B-complex, C, D, and E vitamins, and calcium and magnesium. Therefore, if those wanting better health would take appropriate doses of supplements regularly, they would likely continue to achieve better health and longer life. (Robert G. Smith is Research Associate Professor, University of Pennsylvania Department of Neuroscience. He is a member of the Institute for Neurological Sciences and the author of several dozen scientific papers and reviews.) References: Mursu J, Robien K, Harnack LJ, Park K, Jacobs DR Jr (2011) Dietary supplements and mortality rate in older women. The Iowa Women's Health Study. Arch Intern Med. 171(18):1625-1633. Emery, T. F. Iron and your Health: Facts and Fallacies. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, 1991. Fairbanks, V. F. "Iron in Medicine and Nutrition." Chapter 10 in Modern Nutrition in Health and Disease, editors M. E. Shils, J. A. Olson, M. Shike, et al., 9th ed. Baltimore, MD: Williams & Wilkins, 1999. Hoffer, A., A. W. Saul. Orthomolecular Medicine for Everyone: Megavitamin Therapeutics for Families and Physicians. Laguna Beach, CA: Basic Health Publications, 2008. Parker J, Hashmi O, Dutton D, Mavrodaris A, Stranges S, Kandala NB, Clarke A, Franco OH. Levels of vitamin D and cardiometabolic disorders: systematic review and meta-analysis. Maturitas. 2010 Mar;65(3):225-36. Lappe JM, Travers-Gustafson D, Davies KM, Recker RR, Heaney RP. Vitamin D and calcium supplementation reduces cancer risk: results of a randomized trial. Am J Clin Nutr. 2007 Jun;85(6):1586-91. Padayatty SJ, Sun AY, Chen Q, Espey MG, Drisko J, Levine M. Vitamin C: intravenous use by complementary and alternative medicine practitioners and adverse effects. PLoS One. 2010 Jul 7;5(7):e11414. Williams RJ, Deason G. (1967) Individuality in vitamin C needs. Proc Natl Acad SciUSA.57:16381641. Also of Interest: Orthomolecular Medicine News Service, April 29, 2010. Multivitamins Dangerous? Latest News from the World Headquarters Of Pharmaceutical Politicians, Educators and Reporters. http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v06n15.shtml HERE IS A SOURCE for reliable information from a publication that is peer-reviewed by a panel of 20 nutritionally-minded researchers and doctors who are in favor of vitamin supplementation: http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/index.shtmlPottinger's cats (talk) 09:13, 9 January 2012 (UTC)
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Revert to talk page
I've replaced the talk page information, tags and templaets removed by Pottinger's cats over the past couple days. I believe all the new information was retained. WLU (t) (c) Misplaced Pages's rules:/complex 03:19, 12 January 2012 (UTC)
- I am unaware of removing what you said I removed. Please provide evidence I did this before making such accusations.Pottinger's cats (talk) 10:13, 14 January 2012 (UTC)
- Oops, you're right. Looks like BullRanger did it . The above section should be archived anyway, I'll take care of it. WLU (t) (c) Misplaced Pages's rules:/complex 18:29, 14 January 2012 (UTC)
Biased selection of studies
This article selects relatively few studies, and primarily those supporting its agenda. For example, consider this article and all the studies it refers to ... http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2008/apr2008_Newly-Discovered-Benefits-Of-Vitamin-C_01.htm?source=search&key=vitamin%20c Douglas Cotton (talk) 23:22, 3 April 2014 (UTC)
- You need to read our guideline on reliable sources for medical claims. Yobol (talk) 23:29, 3 April 2014 (UTC)
- There are 58 cited references in the linked document. Which of them do not measure up in your opinion and why? Douglas Cotton (talk) 09:58, 4 April 2014 (UTC)
- That's not how it works. Life extension magazine fails WP:MEDRS. If you think that any of those citations should be used, tell us what change you think should be made to this article and give us a MEDRS-compliant citation supporting the requested change. Do that and we will evaluate the source and your suggested change. That is what you need to do to make changes to Wikimedia medical articles. Accusations of bias and agendas are not helpful. We need reliable sources. --Guy Macon (talk) 15:55, 4 April 2014 (UTC)
- There are 58 cited references in the linked document. Which of them do not measure up in your opinion and why? Douglas Cotton (talk) 09:58, 4 April 2014 (UTC)
Yes, the statement "evidence in favour of vitamin supplementation supports only doses in the normal range" cannot be made by anyone who has not read every single research paper on such. I suggest people read what is said at http://lifeextension.com and note the many thousands of valid research studies in support of mega-vitamin treatment and other such supplementation. My personal experience is that 75gm of IV vitamin C each fortnight has lowered my PSA, thus avoiding the need for radiotherapy. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 202.172.115.20 (talk) 01:21, 14 October 2016 (UTC)
My individual case
...for what it's worth.
First, I'd like to say I'm in favor of mega vitamin therapy in general. My achilles tendons both ruptured after misuse. Nothing helped for six months.
Then, reasoning that tendons are made with collagen and collagen with vitamin C, I tried one gram of vitamin C every hour.
In two days my Achilles were healed.
However...my psychiatrist prescribed me 5mg of folic acid daily for depression. This is 14.5 times the recommended daily allowance.
I believe the result was a polyp in my rectum. This was about to turn cancerous. It was removed. I did not stop taking the folic acid. The growth returned.
I read that folic acid can cause intestinal growths, so I stopped.
That was nine years ago and the growth has not come back.
Incidentally "folic acid" is the artificial form of folate. Folate is difficult to overdose with.
Yes this is "original research". But I hope it's of help.Fletcherbrian (talk) 20:53, 6 October 2014 (UTC)
- Anecdote is outweighed by evidence (by far). Also, this is not a forum to discuss your own subjective experience. This is a place to discuss the article and propose specific changes in order to improve it. Thank you. TylerDurden8823 (talk) 03:35, 14 August 2019 (UTC)
External links modified (January 2018)
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Downgraded from B-class to Start.
Some of the literature is primary (individual clinical trials), other, outdated. David notMD (talk) 00:18, 21 August 2018 (UTC)
- Revised since the downgrade. Other editor should decide if worthy of upgrading to C-class. David notMD (talk) 12:40, 22 August 2018 (UTC)
- COI disclosure: Currently I am self-employed as a science consultant to companies in the dietary supplement, performance nutrition and functional food industries. I am not receiving payments from clients for making changes to Misplaced Pages entries (and have not, and will not). NO PAID EDITING. None of my clients are aware of my Misplaced Pages activities, and none have ever asked me to create or edit Misplaced Pages entries. My intentions are to maintain a neutral point of view while improving the quality of writing and referencing in this article. David notMD (talk) 10:45, 17 January 2018 (UTC)
Why does an article on mega vitamin therapy not mention the work of Nobel prize winning scientist, Linus Pauling?
Why does an article on mega vitamin therapy not mention the work of Nobel prize winning scientist, Linus Pauling? In particular, since the article implied that mega vitamin terapy was only researched/practised by alternative therapists/practitioners, when that is obviously and grossly false.
Many other legitimate scientists and doctors have researched and practised mega vitamin therapy, so are you beling deliberatly disingenuous or just too lazy to do any research beyond or outside your intiial OPINION? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 101.186.21.143 (talk) 00:16, 23 April 2020 (UTC)
- I'm going to guess that's because it was proven in the 80s that he was wrong about it. 2601:541:500:404F:A462:F5D8:88B1:2478 (talk) 00:47, 27 June 2023 (UTC)