No they don't. They say that food can't get you to optimal levels. True. It's impossible with food alone. Doesn't mean you're not healthy, just means you can do better than just food.
JAMA Network | JAMA Internal Medicine | Dietary Supplements and Mortality Rate in Older Women: Â The Iowa Women's Health Study
1. 38,772 older women in the Iowa. I'm sure they paid attention to details of 38,722 women. I'm laughing right now.
2. Average age 61.6 in the year 1986.
3. Supplement use was self-reported. I can't stop laughing, someone please, stop the madness. Study debunked here, but I'll entertain.
4. Through December 31, 2008, a total of 15 594 deaths. No detail? Maybe most were (2008-1986) + 61 = 83 yrs old at death.
5. Who supplements iron unless you suffer iron anemia?
6. Vitamin B6 has been proven for health benefits, even at high doses. Magnesium won't kill you either. Silly students.
7. Zinc? Oh no, how much did they take daily? Nevermind! They refuse to give us dosages. LOL! too cute.
Garbage study. Not even a study. Random and irrelevant observations gathered via electronic communication with 38,722 older broads.
That's a wonderful story, and you tell it so well!
Sickle cell is hereditary. Keep stem cell research alive!
You the man, Dr. Pauling! My kind of doses right there! I'm so happy to see you announce the actual doses you took, unlike the ding dong author who failed to tell us they only used 2 grams in 1942 to gather their finding. doh!
This guy is stuck on Pauling for the majority of the article, citing a bunch of studies that I could not find. Most intelligent authors give credit to originators at the end of an article, and provide reference tags throughout the article. Anyway, let's get passed Pauling... Hey.. I can cite 100's of studies to the benefits of high doses of Vitamin C.
For the love of Arginine, stop with madness. More than 170,000 people? Give me the real number please! lol. I want to see that payroll! Must have hired an army.
Uh.... Maybe your supplements caused amnesia, you mentioned this in the beginning of the article. You twisted your words to make it sounds like another study. Shame on you. And it was 38,722.
Far more evidence that free radicals can do damage. That's not questionable. Free radicals do FAR MORE damage that disrupt cell membranes and damage DNA, but glad you don't think that matters...
You want to rely solely on our bodies to kill cancer cells? I don't. There is such as thing as "Overpowering the immune system". You want to kill cancer cells, use an Eukaryotic elongation factor-2 kinase (EEF2K) inhibitor.
Maybe... just maybe... you could actually do some research on your own, instead of writing an entire article comprised of 42 paragraphs, where only one contains your actual thoughts.
There will always be free radicals. You don't need any sort of balancing. That's just asinine. I have a lot more to say but I just can't deal with it right now.