“Can I get all the nutrients I need from food?” a patient will
occasionally ask. On the surface, this makes sense. After all, if you
are eating a whole, fresh, unprocessed foods diet, shouldn’t you be able
to get an abundant supply of vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, and
other nutrients?
Unfortunately, things aren’t that easy. Even with a perfect diet, the
combination of many things –including our depleted soils, the storage
and transportation of our food, genetic alterations of traditional
heirloom species, and the increased stress and nutritional demands
resulting from a toxic environment – make it impossible for us to get
the vitamins and minerals we need solely from the foods we eat.
Simply put, the evidence shows we cannot get away from the need for nutritional supplements.
Doctors used to think you got all your vitamins and minerals from
food. Any extra nutrients were excreted, or worse, became toxic. But the
tide is shifting. Doctors now prescribe over one billion dollars in
fish oil supplements. Most cardiologists recommend folate, fish oil, and
coenzyme Q10. Gastroenterologists recommend probiotics. Obstetricians
have always recommended prenatal vitamins.
Emerging scientific evidence shows the importance of nutrients as
essential helpers in our biochemistry and metabolism. They are the oil
that greases the wheels of our metabolism. And large-scale deficiencies
of nutrients in our population – including omega-3 fats, vitamin D,
folate, zinc, magnesium, and iron – have been well documented in
extensive government-sponsored research.
SOURCE: MARK HYMAN, MD
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