The United Nations Food Commission Takes Anti-vitamin Supplement Stance; Ignores Science and Widespread Prevalence of Deficiencies
WHO Food Safety director tell CODEX delegates that mega-dose vitamin pills are potentially toxic
San Dimas, CA- In a major step backwards, a spokesperson for the World Health Organization, speaking before the Codex Alimentarius Commission, the United Nations body which sets food standards, warned against high-dose vitamin and mineral supplements, claiming a balanced diet is sufficient and that high-dose supplements are potentially toxic.
Jorgen Schlundt, the executive director of the WHO Food Safety Department, made these unsubstantiated claims in the face of numerous scientific reports which show billions of people across the globe face vitamin and mineral deficiencies which cannot remedied thru dietary measures. "There simply is no way a person, especially a dark-skinned individual living in a northern climate, can obtain sufficient amounts of vitamin D from sunlight exposure or the best diet to prevent common deficiency vitamin D-related deficiency diseases such as osteoporosis, rickets, hyperthyroid, cancer, autoimmunity or high blood pressure. Nor can fertile females consume sufficient amounts of folic acid, even from fortified foods, to optimally reduce the risk for birth defects in their offspring," says health advocate Bill Sardi, president of Knowledge of Health, Inc., San Dimas, CA.
Virtually all 6 billion humans on the planet are vitamin C deficient if compared to most animals that synthesize their own vitamin C. For comparison, a goat, which is about the same weight as a human, produces up to 13,000 milligrams a day. Humans produce no vitamin C internally and must totally rely upon foods for this essential nutrient. Americans consume only about 110 milligrams of vitamin C per day. Due to a genetic mutation that occurred long ago, humans do not synthesize vitamin C as animals do.
A few years ago the American Medical Association, in recognition of widespread nutrient shortages among Americans even when consuming fortified foods, recommended multivitamins for all adults. The WHO recommendation runs contrary to the best scientific studies conducted over the past 50 years.
Various flawed research studies, published in peer reviewed journals, mistakenly claim high-dose vitamin C, beta carotene and folic acid could induce gene mutations or cause cancer. Unfortunately, factitious reports like these are never withdrawn or corrected and are often cited by health authorities. A review of eight years of data produced by the Poison Control Centers of America reveals no deaths from the use of multivitamins. Minor side effects such as temporary diarrhea from excessive vitamin C, loose stool from high-dose magnesium, finger-tingling from mega-dose vitamin B6, flushing from niacin, are reversible and should not be characterized as toxic reactions, says Sardi.
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