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A panel of medical and nutritional
professionals has rebuked an essay published in the Feb. 28 issue of the
JAMA (Journal of the American Medical Association), which claimed that
taking vitamins increases the risk of death.(File Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, March 16 -- A panel of medical and nutritional professionals has
rebuked an essay published in the Feb. 28 issue of the JAMA (Journal of the
American Medical Association), which claimed that taking vitamins increases the
risk of death.
Gathered at a recent symposium on vitamin C, the
experts agreed that a balanced intake of vitamins and minerals is actually
beneficial, not harmful, to one's well-being.
The group said that the study by Serbian doctor Goran
Bjelakovicon was "biased and selective".
Dr Hong Zhaoyi from Shanghai's Xinhua Hospital said
that many of the test subjects were suffering from serious diseases, such as
cancer and vascular disease, which invalidated the findings.
He said the test would have produced very different
results if it had used healthy people. In addition, he said that no systematic
analysis was carried out to determine the causes of death.
Yin Shi'an, director of the Children's and Women's
Nutrition Office, part of the China Disease Control Center, also expressed his
concerns regarding the validity of the results: "Members of the test group were
given higher than recommended doses of vitamin supplements," he said.
Doctor Balz Frei of Oregon State University in the
United States said that a person's daily intake of vitamin C should not exceed 2
grams.
The study's hypotheses that vitamin intake can lead
to conditions such as increased oxalate and kidney stone formation, as well as
uric acid concentrations, were unfounded, Frei said.
While a daily intake of more than 2 grams might lead
to symptoms like diarrhea or gastrointestinal disturbances, these are not
serious, especially as vitamin C is water-resolvent and is discharged through
urine, Frei said.
(Source: China Daily)