90% of Vitamins are Synthetic

Ninety percent of vitamins, even ones labeled ‘natural’ or ‘food-based’, you see in commercials (Centrum), at drug store chains, grocery chains, membership club stores (Kirkland brand), vitamin stores, and even Whole Foods are synthetic. Almost all vitamin brands are made by a handful of the largest pharmaceutical companies. They are just in different packaging for marketing purposes.

Synthetic Vitamins

Man cannot duplicate what nature creates, even when the chemical analysis is identical. Most vitamin supplements are isolated chemical USP (United States Pharmacopeia) vitamins and minerals pressed together in a pill. The vitamins are produced synthetically from petroleum in chemical plants, while the minerals come from mining companies.

Synthetic minerals are derived from rocks such as limestone, coral, oyster shell, sand, and chalk. Yum. Although these materials have mineral profiles, our bodies do not absorb them properly. Humans are not designed to digest rocks and oyster shells. Ideally, we should get all our minerals from plants. Plants absorb these minerals from soil and convert them to a form that is bioavailable to your body. However, because the soils are so deficient in minerals, even on organic farms, we need to take mineral supplements. It is best to take chelated minerals, which are minerals bound to amino acids, for maximum absorption.

Many claim that synthetic vitamins suppress your immune system. Brian Clement, in his book, Supplements Exposed, claims that because of their synthetic nature, the body views synthetic supplements as foreign substances and launches an immune response. Foods and food-based supplements can cause immune system reactions as well. This is not necessarily a reason to avoid synthetic supplements and does not seem to harm your immune system in any meaningful way. For these reasons, I am in favor of using synthetic vitamins and recommend their use.

Food-based vitamins are not always better absorbed. This is not the case with every person or every nutrient. We do absorb synthetic vitamins and minerals. Absorption depends upon many factors. When the body is presented with a synthetic isolate, it may need to draw on its stores of cofactors needed to absorb the vitamins, namely proteins, carbs, fats, bioflavonoids, enzymes, and other vitamins and minerals, but this is not always the case. While true at times, the body is very capable of absorbing a synthesized or isolated nutrient such as vitamin B or vitamin C, even if no other food components or cofactors are provided. If these cofactors are not available, a water-soluble isolate could be excreted and a fat-soluble isolate may be stored in fat, but for the most part the vitamin or mineral can be used. Due to this, the biological activity of synthetic vitamins can be reduced compared to their natural counterparts.

The absorption issue is a stance many food-based supplements take as a reason to use their products, but this issue is really blown far out of proportion. Synthetics are absorbed quite well when taken with a meal. Many synthetic vitamins are poorly absorbed simply because they are bound together with cheap binders that don’t allow a release of the nutrients, not necessarily because the synthetic vitamins are themselves poorly absorbed.

Natural Vitamins

Natural vitamins contain the isolate vitamin (used solely in synthetic vitamins), but they also contain a host of naturally occurring cofactors that assist in the absorption and bioavailability of the vitamin, including proteins, carbs, fats, bioflavonoids, enzymes, other vitamins and minerals, etc. These cofactors must be present for a vitamin or mineral to be used by the body.

For example, to make naturally occurring vitamins, such as vitamin C, a manufacturer could use amla berries, one of the best sources for vitamin C found in nature. A full-spectrum extract is made by removing the non-nutritive fiber. Then the berries are filtered with water, ground up, and dried at low temperatures to concentrate the nutrients and their cofactors. No high heat, freezing, or chemical techniques are used in this natural process. This process would be repeated for other vegetables, fruits, oils, and yeasts to make a full spectrum natural multivitamin.

There is a new standard for natural supplements under development known as the Naturally Occurring Standard (NOS). Products that meet this standard will have a label of approval from NOS proving they are naturally occurring, organic, fairly traded, and free of genetically engineered ingredients, synthetics, and nanoparticles. I anxiously await this standard to be implemented.

One of the main drawbacks of natural vitamins is that you need a lot more of them to get the same results you get with synthetics. Today, most people are toxic and nutrient depleted. They need larger amounts of nutrients than can be obtained with the low doses found in food-based supplements. More food-based supplements are needed to obtain the same dosage as a synthetic in most cases. Food-based supplements are less convenient due to the larger number of tablets or capsules required. Even though a bottle contains 90 tablets, you will likely need to take 4-8 or more per day of a food-based multivitamin to get the same dosage you need with a synthetic vitamin in 2-4 tablets a day. This means that many more tablets must be given, rendering supplementation inconvenient and more expensive.

Food-based products can contain all kinds of different foods to which many could have allergies or sensitivities. As a result, food-based products can cause mild to severe reactions, while the so-called isolated, synthetic nutrient products would not cause such a problem and work far better for sensitive people. People vary in their tolerance to all supplements, as well as to foods.

Food-based natural vitamins will not work for everyone. To say that food-based supplements are better than synthetics is a generalization that is untrue. Again, it’s the old adage: everyone is different. You have to find what supplements work for you. To read more about the differences between food-based vitamins and synthetics, read my blog post Synthetic Vs. Food-based Vitamins.

Best Synthetic Multivitamins

Not everyone responds well to natural, food-based vitamins for the reasons I mentioned. You have to experiment and see what works for your individual biochemistry. These vitamins are not food-based or natural, but very high quality:

  • Jigsaw Complete
  • Klaire Labs
  • Thorne

Don’t buy cheap vitamins! The evidence for how much money is being wasted on cheap synthetics may be found in the Porta Potty business. One business owner reported how his Porta Potty business in Grand Rapids, Michigan, would find “literally thousands of multiple vitamin/mineral tablets in the bottom screens when the Porta Potty is pressure-cleaned after a public event.” Due to the binders in cheap vitamins, most of them pass through you whole, completely undigested. The lesson here: don’t buy cheap synthetic vitamins! You’re wasting your money.

Best Natural Multivitamins

If you want natural vitamins, I’ve compiled a list of brands I like, though it is my no means comprehensive. For a list of names of synthetic and food-based ingredients on labels that will help you discern if the brand you are using is truly natural or a phony food-based vitamin, see my article supplements,  Some of the best natural food-based brands are:

How to Read Labels

If you decide to spend your hard-earned money on vitamins, it is critically important you learn to read labels. I’ve compiled a chart to help you decipher if you are getting what you are paying for in your vitamins.

Beware vitamins that are marketed as ‘natural’ or ‘food-based,’ as most are synthetic. Under current law, a vitamin marketed as natural only has to contain 10 percent natural, plant-derived ingredients – the other ninety percent can be synthetic. The first such type of product uses a natural base, and then synthetic nutrients are added. An example of a natural base is Acerola cherry or rosehip, to which synthetic vitamin C, ascorbic acid, is added. A second type of product uses a ‘food source’ or ‘whole food source’ base such as yeast or algae, to which synthetic vitamins are added. Manufacturers call these supplements ‘natural’ because they are derived from yeast or algae – natural botanicals. However, they are not completely natural because synthetic vitamins have been added to the product.

A product can even be labeled 100% organic and not be natural at all. To be called organic a supplement need only have one carbon atom. This definition broadens the range from acceptable food sources of animal and plant tissues to raw materials including coal tar and wood pulp. Many synthetics are made from coal tar derivatives.

Many so-called natural vitamins have synthetics added to increase potency, or to standardize the amount in a capsule or batch. In addition, a salt form of the vitamin can be added to increase stability of the nutrient (i.e. acetate, bitartrate, chloride, gluconate, hydrochloride, nitrate, succinate). These terms added to the vitamin name help you identify synthetics.

Generally speaking, you can identify natural vitamins by reading the label and finding a listed “food” source such as citrus, yeast, fish, vegetable, etc. If a chemical is listed or the source is blank, it is synthetic.

One easy way to tell if a vitamin is synthetic is to look at the RDA. If the potency is higher than anything you would find in nature (example 1000% Daily Recommended Allowance of vitamin C per serving), the product contains synthetically produced ingredients, no matter what the producer of that product might claim.

The following chart will help you determine whether you are buying synthetic or natural vitamins. The ‘d’ or ‘dl’ form of any vitamin is synthetic.

Nutrient Natural Synthetic
Vitamin A Fish Oils
Lemon Grass
Acetate
Palmitate
If source not given
B-Complex Brewer’s Yeast If source not given
B1 Thiamine Yeast
Thiamin
Thiamine
Thiamine Mononitrate
Thiamine Hydrochloride
B2 Riboflavin Yeast
Riboflavin
Natural
Synthetic
B3Niacin Yeast
Niacinamide
Nicotinamide
Niacin
Nicotinic Acid
B5 Pantothenic Acid Yeast
Rice Bran
Liver
Pantothenic Acid
Calcium Pantothenate
d-Pantothenate
Panthenol
B6 Pyridoxine Yeast Pyridoxine Hydrochloride
B9 Folic Acid Yeast
Liver
Folate
Pteroylglutamate
Folic Acid
Pteroylglutamic Acid
B12 Liver
Micro-organism fermentation
Cobalamin Concentrate
Cyanocobalamin
Vitamin C Citrus
Rose Hips
Acerola Berries
Camu Camu Berries
Amla Berries
Ascorbic Acid
If source not given
Vitamin D Fish Oils
D3
Cholecalciferol
D2
Ergosteral (Yeast)
Calciferol
Vitamin E Vegetable Oil
Wheat Germ Oild-alpha tocopherold-alpha tocopheryl acetated-alpha tocopheryl succinated-beta Tocopherol
d-delta Tocopherol
d-gamma Tocopherol
dl-Alpha Tocopheroldl-Beta Tocopheroldl-Delta Tocopheroldl-Gamma Tocopherol
Vitamin F Essential Fatty Acids
Vitamin K Alfalfa Menadione
PABA Yeast
Para-aminobenzoic Acid
Aminobenzoic Acid
Inositol Soy Beans
Reduced from Corn (not 100% natural)
Choline Soy Beans Choline Chloride
Choline Bitartrate
Biotin Liver d-Biotin

Why You Need a Multivitamin

Even if you eat only unprocessed organic foods, you will still not get all the nutrients you need. I urge you to take a multivitamin and mineral supplement for the following reasons:

  • The foods you eat are stripped of nutrients through refining and processing.
  • The foods you eat are laden with fats, sugars, and salts, and devoid of other essential nutrients that strip your body of nutrients to digest them.
  • A USDA government survey of 21,500 people found that not one single person consumed 100% of the U.S. RDA (recommended daily allowance) from the foods they ate.
  • Due to the time it takes fresh foods to get from the farm to your table, 57% or more of the nutritional value can be lost.
  • Soils, even at organic farms, become depleted of vitamins and minerals after years of cultivation.
  • Soils are much more depleted than they were even 30 years ago as pesticide use and chemical fertilizers, contributing to soil depletion, have increased in use over the years.

Supplement Tips

Here are a few tips to make your supplement regimen more effective.

  • Some people can be allergic to food-based vitamins. For these individuals, synthetic vitamins will work just fine. Start a natural vitamin and see how you feel. Allergic reactions can include rashes, runny nose, fatigue, headache, nausea, etc.
  • Avoid Kirkland, membership club and large store chain generic supplements completely! The problem with this brand is that they are made in China and have inactive ingredients that are very toxic. Inactive ingredients in Kirkland supplements include Croscarmellose Sodium, Microcrystalline Cellulose, Silicon Dioxide, Magnesium Stearate (Not from plant), Stearic Acid, Sodium Lauryl Sulfate, Hypromellose, Artificial Vanilla Flavor, Polyethylene Glycol, and Carnauba Wax. Many chemists say these ingredients are toxic and are borderline neurotoxins.
  • A once a day vitamin is a waste of money. You can only absorb so many nutrients at a time. For instance, you can only absorb 500mg of vitamin C at a time. So, if you only take a multivitamin once a day, with your recommended daily allowance of vitamin C all at once, only 500mg will be absorbed and the rest excreted. A good multi must be taken 2-4 times a day. Deal with it.
  • Do not take megadoses of any particular vitamin or mineral without first consulting your doctor. High doses of individual vitamins or minerals can cause toxicity symptoms, and may interfere with the absorption of medications and other vitamins and minerals. Multivitamins offer a balanced way to increase your intake of vitamins and minerals and make it less likely you will become deficient in the nutrients they contain. One exception is vitamin C, which may be taken in higher individual doses if you are sick or under stress. Be sure to take vitamin C two hours before or after consuming B12 supplements or foods containing B12 (meat, fish, eggs, cheese) to avoid preventing absorption of the B12.
  • Most supplements should be in capsule form. The binders most companies use to make pills do not digest. In fact, most are expelled in your stool whole! Obviously, this means you did not reap the benefit of your expensive supplement. However, supplements pressed into pills, like chlorella, are not made with binders. They are just pressed into a pill shape. If you’re not sure, call the manufacturer and ask.
  • Be sure to switch your multivitamin or any other supplement every few months so you avoid developing an allergy to them. Just like if you ate a burrito at every meal for months, your body would start rejecting them even though they are oh so good. Change it up.
  • Take your multivitamin before you eat. This way you remember to take your vitamins and you fill up a bit on the water. If you wait until after, you’re usually too full and may not want to take them or end up feeling overly full.
  • Natural vitamins can be taken on an empty stomach because they are food. Some find that synthetic vitamins upset their stomach if taken without food.
  • Avoid supplements that contain soy, unless they are organic. If it’s not organic, the soy is likely GMO, genetically modified, as 90% of worldwide soy is genetically modified. Animals fed GMO’s have lower immunity, lowered infertility or complete infertility in themselves or their offspring, and have damaged organs, while many simply die. If you eat GMO’s, the same thing will likely happen to you, too. If you’re not sure if your supplement has GMO soy, call the manufacturer and ask.
  • Women and men over 35 should generally avoid vitamins with iron. Supplemental iron can become toxic and is usually in a form that the body does not absorb well. Daily iron supplementation is not needed by most adults. In fact, one of the main ways children are poisoned and die is from ingesting supplements containing iron. You get enough iron by eating pastured grass-fed red meat once a week.
  • Magnesium stearate fears are are overblown. This is a material that is used to prevent pills from sticking together during manufacture.  Many reputable manufacturers use plant-derived magnesium stearate. This is better than synthetic magnesium stearate used lot of  manufacturers. Reduce your fear of maggie stearate by reading Chris Kresser’s article on Magnesium Stearate.
  • Try to avoid capsules made of gelatin. Many reputable companies make their supplements using gelatin, but I wanted to give you a little heads up about potential ingredients in this material. Gelatin is made from beef, pork hides, bones, marrow, and tissue scraps, including diseased organs and tumors. A frightening aspect of any animal product is the potential for traces of animal feed toxins (GMO’s and pulverized diseased animals fed back to animals), hormones, and animal pathogens like mad cow disease. Even if you’re not vegetarian, this is pretty unappetizing.
  • Avoid time-release products. They are in binders that don’t actually release the entire supplement. You’re just going to have to choke down that pill three times a day. No regulations require supplement makers to prove their products are time-released as advertised.
  • Avoid high potency products. This is a marketing claim for manufacturers to differentiate their product.
  • Avoid sweeteners found in supplements as sucrose, fructose, sorbitol, maltodextrin and maltose (made from GMO corn). All these are chemically synthesized and are extremely harmful as they fuel viruses, bacteria, and cancers. Most liquid vitamins contain sweeteners to disguise the horrible taste of vitamins.
  • Avoid colorful vitamins (and colorful medications). Artificial colors are added for marketing purposes. Some are derived from natural sources like beets (most of which are now GMO), carrots, or chlorophyll, but most are toxic synthetics derived from petroleum. Many of these dyes, such as FD&C reds and yellows have a direct link to cancer development. If you need to take a medication and don’t want the dyes, you can have a compounding pharmacy make your medication.
  • Store your supplements in a cool, dry place and out of the sun. Don’t store them in your car or in hot and damp places like the kitchen and bathroom. They lose their potency when heated or moisturized in a steamy bathroom.
  • A good probiotic can increase absorption rates of nutrients by 50%. Additionally, probiotic bacteria produce many vitamins including the vitamin B complex, K, biotin and many other substances in the body. This is why starving people manage to stay alive – the gut bacteria produce vitamins. Your health depends upon the health of your colon. Take a good probiotic or eat fermented foods (which contain trillions of probiotics) daily. For more information, see my article Probiotics – The Foundation of Health.
  • It is advisable to take one day off a week from your supplement regimen to give your body a break. You can, however, continue to take your multivitamin and minerals every day.
  • You can’t rely on a vitamin supplement to make up for an unhealthy diet. They should be looked at as insurance to get the major vitamins we didn’t get in our diet. There are more than 20,000 different antioxidants in our diet, many of which have yet to be discovered. These cannot all be put in a pill. Eat some organic meats, vegetables, and fruit people. Puh-lease!

If you know of great natural vitamins, please let me know in a comment below. I’ll add them to the list!

The Medicinal Supplements Summit

Did you know that of the 54,000 dietary supplement products sold today, only a third have some level of safety and effectiveness that is supported by scientific evidence? Many supplements, even organic ones, are contaminated with toxic metals like lead, cadmium and arsenic. You could be taking supplements that are actually doing more harm than good!SUPP16_banner_attend_600x600

That’s why I’m hosting the Medicinal Supplements Summit, taking place from September 12 – 19!

This amazing online summit is dedicated to educating consumers on healthy supplementation and the latest in supplement customization testing. Join me and over 35 like-minded health professionals – including doctors, supplement manufacturers, and best selling authors – who are dedicated to helping you HEAL.

Register for FREE now >>>> Click Here

Own all of the expert talks to watch at your own pace >>>>  Click Here

My deepest hope is that you and your family experience vibrant health. And it all begins with taking the right supplements for YOU. So mark your calendars and join us for the Medicinal Supplements Summit September 12-19th! I’ll see you there!

Click Here for References+

1. Clement, Brian. vitamins, vitamin supplements, Natural Vitamins, Best Synthetic Multivitamins, Best Natural Multivitamins, Why You Need a Multivitamin, Vitamin Deficiency, Probiotics, Kirkland supplements, Infrared saunas, get rid of parasites” Supplements Exposed. Franklin Lakes: Career Press, 2010.
2. Clement, Brian. The Vitamin Myth Exposed. Franklin Lakes: Career Press, 2011.
3. When NOT to take your Multivitamin. vitamins, vitamin supplements, Natural Vitamins, Best Synthetic Multivitamins, Best Natural Multivitamins, Why You Need a Multivitamin, Vitamin Deficiency, Probiotics, Kirkland supplements, Infrared saunas, get rid of parasites” http://www.mercolashop.com/multi-vital-minerals/
4. Synthetic vs. Natural vitamins.
http://www.nutriteam.com/

in Articles/Supplements/Survive

Dr Wendy Myers, ND is a detox expert, functional diagnostic nutritionist, NES Bioenergetic Practitioner, and founder of Myersdetox.com. She is the #1 bestselling author of Limitless Energy: How to Detox Toxic Metals to End Exhaustion and Chronic Fatigue . Additionally, Wendy is the host of The Heavy Metals Summit, the Myers Detox Podcast, and the Supercharged Podcast. Passionate about the importance of detox to live a long and healthy life, she created the revolutionary Myers Detox Protocol , and Mitochondria Detox kit after working with thousands of clients, as well as a range of supplements to help you detox from everyday living and maintain a healthy lifestyle!

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Ricardi
10 years ago

Hi Wendy,

Great article, thank you. I noted under the natural suplement section as you mentioned it’s not conclusive, but you must have a look at Mannatech’s “phytomatrix” and “nutriverus.” They are truly amazing!

I’ve done a lot of research and their products certainly deserve a top spot on that list.

Keep doing your great work. Love your site.

Kyle
Kyle
9 years ago
Reply to  Ricardi

This is a load of crap. If you body is release an immune response to synthetic vitamins, YOU ARE USING MORE ENERGY TO FIGHT THE so called “VITAMINS.” No body builder would ever want that. And, if your body is releasing an immune response, shouldn’t that tell anybody, immediately, to avoid the synthetic vitamins.

What is your justification for recommended synthetic vitamins if the real stuff is obviously better? Money? It’s cheaper?

So let us be philosophers for one second here. Let us put aside money… Now, would you EVER choose to take synthetic vitamins over the real stuff? Answer: NO!

Presley Thompson
10 years ago

Hi Wendy- this is great!

I’m curious if you have an opinion on Biotics Research products, as I’ve had excellent success with their clinical formulas. They do thorough quarantined lab testing of all raw materials and have extremely high standards with regards to quality control and effectiveness- testing for the presence of heavy metals, the activity level and even the species/part of the source plant. As a bonus, they don’t use the typical sugars, starches or inert materials as a tableting base, but instead developed a plant-based phytonutrient- and antioxidant-rich formula that accompanies every supplement that is in tablet form.

I’ve been using their products for about 6 months now, but am always interested in other perspectives and experiences. This was a great and informative read, thank you!

In health,

Presley

Tayler
Tayler
10 years ago

Hi!

I’m wondering why Garden of Life vitamin Code multivitamin did not make the list? It appears on the surface to match up with your recommendations, and I’m concerned there is something that I am missing about this brand?

Thank you!!

Justin Roberts
10 years ago

Hi Wendy,
Vita4life bariatric multivitamins have been FDA approved and are completely filler free. There have been no side effects reported by patients using them and clinical test have also proven no side-effects.

Reggi
Reggi
9 years ago

What is your opinion re the Mega Foods Line of vitamins / supplements? On the label, they list S. cerevisiae as a source for a lot of the vitamins listed. What does this mean? Thank you!

Wendy Myers
9 years ago
Reply to  Reggi

S. cerevisiae is a yeast. Some food-based vitamins (like B vitamins) are grown in yeast cultures, which is why a lot of people cannot tolerate them. Mega foods seems like a good brand. Eat up!

bsf
bsf
9 years ago

what do you think of Garden of life raw prenatal?

Wendy Myers
9 years ago
Reply to  bsf

Not a fan of the ‘raw’ vitamins. Kinda gimmicky to me. It contains Folic Acid. you don’t want to take this when you’re pregnant. You want to take folate. Plus, to get the daily amount you need of the minerals it contains, you’d need to take 5-6 per day, which would be giving you waaaaay too much copper, which pregnant women tend to accumulate more of when they’re pregnant. Most people are copper toxic and you don’t want to add to this issue, much less pass this to your baby any more than is necessary. The minerals in this product are not in the correct ratios. I would much rather see a pregnant women take a high quality multi-chelated mineral like http://www.vitacost.com/vitacost-chelated-multi-mineral-albion-glycinate-chelates-and-complexes-120-capsules (5 per day) and a separate vitamin that contains folate (not folic acid) and extra iron. Plus a great Omega-3 daily – a MUST for a developing fetus’s brain. Ideally, one should do my Mineral Power program and it will give one a customized supplement program that is the best option one can get for taking the right supplements for your exact body chemistry. https://myersdetox.com/mineral-power. But short of doing my program, this is what I would recommend. You don’t always find what you need in one pill.

Mary Scaletta
Mary Scaletta
7 years ago
Reply to  Wendy Myers

So Wendy does your recommendation of the Vitacost brand here mean that you like that brand generally? I shop on that site all the time but have been afraid to use that brand (even though part of me wants to because it’s so much cheaper) because I don’t know much about their process. It also feels like buying a grocery store’s generic brand of something partly because it is actually a grocery store’s (possibly Kroger) generic brand. I also, possibly incorrectly, equate that brand with a brand you’d find at Walgreens or CVS which like Centrum. If this is not the case please let me know because I would like to sometimes use them.

Wendy Myers
7 years ago
Reply to  Mary Scaletta

I think that vitacost is good for their mineral products. I don’t know all of their products, but do think they have some good products and very good prices. it depends on which product. These are not the same as a generic walgreens or drugstore brand, which is complete crap. I would avoid anything at a drug store, memebership club and most stores at all costs. I like the products at Whole foods as the supplement purchasing process is very rigorous. Bad products can’t get through .Other chains are not so discriminating.

Wendy Myers
9 years ago

Like I said in the article, it doesn’t matter how good a food based vitamin is if you don’t tolerate them. I have a lot of clients that have leaky gut or other issues and they cannot take food-based vitamins. So, synthetic vitamins will have to do. They do improve vitamin status.

Wendy Myers
9 years ago

I don’t get excited about food-based vitamins unless they’re organic like my favorite Innate Response. http://store.myersdetox.com/brands/Innate-Response.html I can only recommend organic food-based vitamins. If you’re going to take vitamins you might as well get them from a company that focuses only on the development of supplements. I feel the company just added them because they have a broad base of customers for their essential oils.
Here is a nice article that may make you switch to Young Living oils. They have more control over their product, from growth and production of their own plants. Doterra does not do this.
http://www.theessentialfamily.com/why-i-passed-on-doterra-essential-oils/

Liz
Liz
9 years ago
Reply to  Wendy Myers

I really enjoy my dōTERRA Lifelong Vitality. The products are HIGH quality and are sourced from their natural environment. On top of that it’s all about their CPTG – which I know lots of people pick on them for this but it’s their message to the consumer that we are in fact, getting the highest quality products possible. They don’t cut corners, everything is made sure to be held at the highest standards possible from beginning to finish. The proof is in the pudding. #1 Seller, 30-day money back guarantee. So many lives changed. And I think you should look over your statement regarding that YL has more control over their products. Ina sense this may be true because they farm quite a few of their products, mimicking the natural environment many plants thrive in. However, you cannot always have the perfect environment unless you actually grow the plant in it. dōTERRA oversees all processes from beginning to end, 3rd party testing to ensure they live up to their high standards. Also, I know YL does deal with a few brokers (the in-between man) to receive oils. So in short, ELLEN, stay with dōTERRA.

Wendy Myers
9 years ago

I’m not super excited about Youngevity minerals because they don’t list the mineral content or the forms of each mineral. This is key for me to know before I could recommend it. I find it very odd that this information is not available.

Wendy Myers
9 years ago

I like Dr. Schulze.

Steph
Steph
8 years ago

What a great article! Loved all the info in it. I currently use the whole food supplement Juice Plus and have had great results. All natural and locally farmed ingredients. Even folate instead of folic acid. http://Www.bestwholefoodvitamin.com

Wendy Myers
8 years ago

Sounds very interesting!! There are many great supplements on the market. Impossible to list them all. If that product is natural, you trust it, and it makes you feel good, then by all means take it!

Ellen
Ellen
9 years ago

Hi there!
I’m curious what your thoughts are on doTERRA’s Lifelong Vitality vitamins. All food based and very natural.

lee snell
lee snell
9 years ago

What about plant derived minerals from a company called youngevity

Carol Williams
Carol Williams
9 years ago

what about Dr. Schulze’s SuperFood Plus?

Daniel
Daniel
8 years ago

I only take the very first vitamin suppliment that started the whole supplements in 1938 company called Nutrilite double x the very first vitamin to ever come out. They grown their own fruits and vegtables on their own certified organic farms. What do you think?

Sun Duppy
Sun Duppy
7 years ago
Reply to  Daniel
Wendy Veith
Wendy Veith
7 years ago

Wendy, I loved your Medicinal Supplements summit. Would you please, if possible, recommend some brands or manufacturers of supplements like Tumeric, Umbiquenol, etc. Thank you. Wendy Veith

Wendy Myers
7 years ago
Reply to  Wendy Veith

HI Wendy!
Thank you so much! I really like liposmal turmeric. I take Nutrasal brand.

Jay
Jay
7 years ago

Hi thanks for shedding light on this????
What do you think about the multivitamin by mega foods brand? Their plant derived

Wendy Myers
7 years ago
Reply to  Jay

Yes, they are a great brand! Love them!

Jay
Jay
7 years ago

the relay switch to your memory file cabinet, and it’s also your brain GPS (that guidance device in your car that helps you locate where you’re going). So your memories don’t get lost, but you can lose access to these files. You’re driving somewhere, and then suddenly say, ―Hhhmmm…where am I going again?‖ You’re talking to someone, but then you go blank. You look for something, and then have to backtrack and try to find out what you were looking for. The hippocampus helps locate your position in space and time—birds have a huge hippocampus, which is needed to fly home in the winter, acting as a guidance system. People with Alzheimer’s will walk aimlessly in the parking lot trying to find their car or maybe they are just wandering around because they forgot they have a car. They lose their mental mojo because their hippocampus is shrinking.
When the adrenal gland decrease in function, the inability to handle life’s stress increases. One patient of mine couldn’t even sit through a movie that had any suspense; it would keep her up all night long. I had another patient who didn’t have the patience to stand in line at the grocery store.
The adrenal-deficient case is usually worrying 24/7, which is very draining and leads to the need for stimulants like coffee, soda, tea, and chocolate. These might give them an hour of clarity or feeling up, but the rest of the day is dull and lacks sharpness.
It’s ALL short term survival
From a physiological standpoint, all long term survival functions get turned off and all short term survival functions get stuck on. The body needs quick energy right now! Dump the sugar into the muscles and mobilize keen mental energy, increase blood pressure, heart rate, and breathing. But on the flip side shut down reproduction, growth, and repair of tissues; shut down the immune system, forget about ovulating, and digesting. Over time this doesn’t increase survival because you develop ulcers and diabetes and destroy the brain, become sterile, and of course, lose your libido (sex drive). In short term survival mode, there’s no time for thinking long term—it’s right now—put the fire out, get away from that tiger or you’ll get eaten—there’s no time for reproducing.