- June 18, 2022
- No Comment
- 3 minutes read
Nutritional deficiency – Lovely County Citizen
Trust me, I couldn’t help myself. I just had to write this column after reading an advertisement in the coupon section of the big daily Arkansas newspaper.
The ad was selling a very well known multi-vitamin. The interesting thing is they asked if we knew that up to 90 percent of Americans fall short in getting important nutrients from food alone.
The specific nutrients and deficit amount referred to, apparently, are vitamin A (50 percent), vitamin C (40 percent), vitamin D (90 percent), vitamin E (90 percent) and calcium (50 percent). As part of a healthy lifestyle they go on to say exercise, eat fresh and get good sleep every day as well as take the multi.
Wow. I don’t know where they got these numbers as there was not a reference to follow. The big corporation behind the ad certainly would have vetted the information before publishing so I’m awestruck at the high numbers. This ad actually states “fall short in getting important nutrients from food alone.” That the great majority of Americans eats so poorly and/or consumes such low-quality food which makes for this statement is profound.
Add to this the well-established reality of induced nutritional deficiency caused by prescribed drugs and we have an extensive health crisis.
A little while ago I started a series of Natural Way columns with the following; “In our nutty system which often pits medications/science against nutritional supplements the bias supporting medicine is usually given top dog status. Dire warnings abound that if you do this drug or that, then these supplements will interfere causing harm. Rarely is there a balanced approach. Suppose the prescription medication bias with huge amounts of corporate money backing it is entirely backward? Suppose the prescription drug is actually interfering with the absorption of the nutritional supplement.
“Suppose, it is well established that prescribed drugs often and commonly create new ailments by causing vitamin and mineral deficits … what would you do? Think about this as this is more often the case than we can imagine. It is very easy to find out if your prescribed drug is interfering with nutrient absorption. Simply Google ‘(drug) nutritional deficiency’ and you’ll get information, then supplement accordingly.”
So this is what I suggest be done to keep your overall health strong. Support your local farmer’s market as much as possible. Avoid sugar along with processed grains, opting for fresh flavors. Walk every day and get a good night’s sleep — theanine, glycine, CBD and melatonin are good for this — supplement daily with a quality multi-vitamin and a potent enteric-coated probiotic.