Who Needs To Take Vitamins?
By Donovan Baldwin
Do you need vitamins, minerals and other
dietary supplements for your health? If you
do, which vitamins should you take?
Most of us are willing to concede the necessity
of having a good balance of vitamins, minerals,
and other nutrients in our daily diet for
good health, but many of us wonder if it is
necessary to use vitamin pills and other dietary
supplements to do this. Can't we get enough
of the vitamins we need from our daily diet?
I suppose that some of us might be
in good enough health not to need additional
vitamins, minerals, and other dietary
supplements, but IF YOU FALL INTO ONE
OF THE GROUPS BELOW, you might want to
consider adding at least a daily multivitamin
supplement to your diet.
If you are a woman: Women are possibly
deficient in such minerals as magnesium,
folic acid, zinc, calcium, and in some
cases, iron. If you are pregnant or using
birth control, you may require additional
vitamin or mineral supplements for good
health.
If you diet for weight loss or follow
a fairly limited diet or restricted nutritional
regimen: Important vitamins and minerals
are scattered widely across a broad range
of nutritional options (i.e. foods), and
if you are limiting your intake by volume
or by type, you are likely limiting your
intake of vitamins, minerals, and other
nutrients vital to your health.
If you eat the normal American diet:
Actually, the normal American diet is
not very normal, nor is it good for your
health! It is, however, terribly lacking
in the vitamins, minerals, enzymes, hormones,
and other nutritional elements a healthy
body needs. Additionally, if your diet
does contain all of these in optimal quantities,
you are probably eating way too much food
- Catch 22!
If you smoke or drink alcohol often:
Smoking and excessive drinking (roughly
more than two drinks a day - which is
GOOD for you), depletes certain vitamins
and other nutrients.
If you are already NOT in good health,
physically or mentally: Your body may
not be processing the vitamins, minerals,
etc. that your are providing in your diet.
Also, the EXTRA vitamins, minerals, and
other nutrients you provide with supplements
may have a positive affect on the condition.
It goes without saying that an appropriate
supplementation program MIGHT HAVE PREVENTED
or lessened the impact of the health problem
in the first place.
If you love junk food and it tends to
be a major part of your diet: Once again,
you are probably not getting the dietary
balance of vitamins, minerals, and other
nutritional elements necessary for good
health. Sadly, many of the constituents
of these types of food, particularly refined
sugar, actually leach vitamins, minerals,
and other nutrients from your body, or
prevent the effective use, tranport, or
absorption of these nutrients.
If you cannot afford a steady diet of
the foods that you realize are most valuable
to your health: A multivitamn pill costs
only a few cents a day, and without changing
another single fact of your life, can
contribute significantly to your health
and well-being.
If you are over 65 years of age: You
have specific deficiencies and needs,
as well as a possible array of health
problems. Odds are that you are lacking
in B-12, Vitamin D, Vitamin K, folic acid,
zinc, Vitamin C, and other vitamins and
minerals. As our bodies age (I'm 60, so
I can talk), they become less efficient
at processing nutrients of all types,
so even if your typical diet contains
all the nutrients you need, your body
is probably not getting the complete benefit
from them. I mentioned some possible deficiencies
above. Let's look at only one - Vitamin
D deficiency - as this is very common
in folks over 65. This vitamin deficiency
may contribute to some forms of cancer
(including breast and colon cancer), muscular
weakness, joint pain, and the well published
one - osteoporosis. Again, a daily multivitamin
can go a long way towards promoting health
in the years both before and after age
65. OKAY, WHO'S LEFT!
If you are male, under 65, in excellent
mental and physical health, exercise regularly,
have a nutritionally rich and diverse
diet, do not smoke or drink, and are NOT
QUITE CERTAIN that YOUR DIET contains
all the vitamins, minerals, and other
nutritional elements necessary for good
health: You MIGHT want to tilt the odds
in your favor with a good daily multivitamin
supplement.
EVERYBODY ELSE CAN LEAVE!
Your health is fine. You don't need to
supplement your present diet with vitamins
and minerals.
The author is retired from the Army after
21 years of service, has worked as an
accountant, optical lab manager, restaurant
manager, and instructor. He has been a
member of Mensa for several years, and
has written and published poetry, essays,
and articles on various subjects for the
last 40 years. He developed an interest
in health and fitness in the '70s after
reading numerous books on the subject,
including Dr. Kenneth Cooper's "Aerobics",
and beginning his own lifelong fitness
program. This has led him to continue
his personal research into health and
fitness for over 30 years, and to pursue
course work on health and fitness. He
now has an online health supplement store
at http://eherbsstore.com.
Find other health and weight loss tips
at http://nodiet4me.com.
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