Reasons or
Results!
Fitness Nutrition Training
Sovereign
Michael Valentine
SPN,
CFT, Eft, Yft, Cft, SSc, GFI, CMCht, CERT, Reiki Master
206.225.9647
email: sovereignmv@gmail.com
web:
bnbbs.myshaklee.com
Part of the
Dietary Supplements:
Dave
How about you?
Would you say there is a difference?
Dallas Magazine had 40 products from five different stores independently tested. 50% did not meet label claims. Five had no active ingredients at all. Whole Foods Store brand had streptococcus bacteria in the pills.
In 1999, GHB,
(gamma-hydroxybutyrate), a body building supplement was responsible for three
Florida Poison Control Centers logging 549 negative incidences and two deaths.
The same year the FDA threatened lawsuits and search and seizure. One year
later, with reports even higher, Congress outlawed GHB. There have been 60
deaths reported from GHB so far.
Rexall
Sundown's St. John's Wort herbal formula had only 20% of the labeled potency.
In addition, Rexall used legitimate peer-reviewed research work to support the
claims for their product, even though they hadn't done any research with their own product.
The April 2000 issue of Emergency Medicine reported about a 30 year old athlete who took androstenedione, a testosterone precursor. Touted as an “enhancer of athletic performance” his friend told him, "Those pills will help build muscle size.” He took it for seven days and by the time he was admitted to the emergency room he had been suffering for more than 30 hours with a painful, persistent erection. If untreated, tissue damage could have resulted. This condition is known as priapism.
This is how some companies work: They figure out their target market, say... “weight loss” or “body building” then they hire a dietary supplement bottling company to put their label with implied benefits on the bottle. And then they start selling them. They are not necessarily effective or safe, there is very little regulation and too few people to enforce the laws that are in existence.
If you would like my assistance
getting on a dietary supplement program which assures better health, performance
and attainment of your goals, or know anyone who might call or write me at the
above contact information
Special Report #21
Part of the
“I see you
to succeeding"
series.
Dietary Supplements:
What’s the difference?
...you decide.
Jenny
Jenny says, "I had been very tired, bitchy,
paranoid, ornery and depressed with severe mood swings...basically a basket
case ever since my husband first knew me.”
Thinking it was hormone related, the doctors put her on a birth control
pill called Deprovera. Her doctor told her it had side effects but she took it
anyway because she did not want to have to take a birth control pill every day. "My doctor also prescribed vitamins; five different bottles at $55
each,” said Jenny.
"My
husband told me not to take it also. I started in September and took it once
every three months for a year. Exactly on the one year anniversary, mid September, I started bleeding uncontrollably. Some of the clots were bigger than golf
balls. I was using a box of Kotex in less than 12 hours. I was taken to the
emergency room four times. Every time I went the doctors said there was nothing
they could do for me and I should just go home and wait until the blood clots
stopped coming. They finally sent me to a specialist who said, "Guess
what... your insides are messed up. If you get pregnant your child will
probably be deformed and you probably will not carry the baby to full
term." The bleeding would stop for a few days then start again. So my
doctor put me on a birth control pill and the bleeding stopped."
Jenny's
original doctor had long since refused to return her calls or respond to her at
all. Her husband learned about the different kinds of vitamins on the market
and suggested she take food concentrates. Her husband put her prescription vitamins in
cups with water and the food concentrates in separate cups on the kitchen
table. But Jenny said, "I did not want any part of it.” By this
time she said her husband was at his wits end because he kept having to rush
her to the hospital, not to mention her disposition most of the time.
Jenny
would not look into the cups but her husband left the cups on the table and after 5 days she peaked into the cups. The
prescription vitamins were still sitting there undissolved. The food
concentrates were completely dissolved. She started on the food concentrates in
mid December.
Two years later she gave birth to a healthy baby. Sarah sent pictures to her
original doctor, but her doctor did not respond back.
Wendy
says, "I knew I was headed down the road to some really bad health
problems. I was at the bad symptom stage of health. I was constantly running to
the doctor and taking medications. I really was not getting any help. The
symptom stage is where you have a choice. You can continue the route of
medication which temporarily covers up the symptoms or you can make some
changes, use nutrition and go for optimal health."
"I did not think nutrition could help me that
much. How could some nutrition make any difference in my life? I had taken
vitamins for all these years of my life so I thought I was pretty healthy.”
"I
had extreme fatigue, problems maintaining my blood sugar, I had vein problems,
leg aches, I could not stand for more than an hour, digestive problems,
allergies, food made me sick, chronic coughing, menstrual problems including
PMS that was out of control and I missed work each month. I also had leg
cramps, stigmatism in both eyes, dry skin and depression. It ran in my family so I thought I was normal."
Dave
Dave says,
"My being here is a testimony to the power of food concentrates. I just
rebounded in a miraculous time period. I attribute it to the Good Lord, a lot
of loving care from my family and concentrated food. First afflicted in my mid
twenties with rectal bleeding, it lasted eight months and I saw three
specialists. I had to look for a restroom everywhere I went. In December 1991 I
spent $10,000 in one week in the hospital hemorrhaging and having diarrhea 20 to
30 times a day. I puffed up like a water melon from the medications.”
"In
February 1992 I was still having the same problems and not getting better and I
lost complete control of my bowels seven times. I have my own business and I would
be in a business transaction and nearly knock the table over trying to make it
to the restroom, only not to make it there on time. In March 1993 I was totally
incapacitated for two weeks. I had diarrhea 30-50 times a day and I was crying
with unbearable pain while going to the bathroom. I increased the drugs and
went into the emergency room on a Saturday morning. This time I was there 23
days at a cost of $35,000."
"I got on my food
concentrates and within 10 days I had no problems and I am symptom free.” "Now
on five medications, no veins left from the IV, still bleeding rectally, they
put a hole in me to put food in
me. I was in the hospital bed fighting
with the doctors and two different nutritionists because they wanted to take me off the food
concentrates and put me on a product called Ensure. I was showing them
what was in the food concentrates and what was in the Ensure. "They didn't get it.” "I had not
slept for more than three hours in three months. The doctors wanted me to get
an ileostomy. In 7 years I did not go 90 days without problems." "I
got on my food concentrates and within 10 days I had no problems and I am
symptom free.”
There is no tricking the body... the cells know the
difference.
In
January 2000 the Food and Drug Administration made a ruling on The Dietary
Supplement Act of 1994. Previous to 2000, manufacturers of vitamins, minerals
and other supplements could not make any claims about what their products “do”
for the body and health. This created a huge gap between the information about
what the benefits of supplements and consumer's ability to make use of the
information. In other words, when I was managing the GNC store, we could have
books about what supplements to take for each particular health condition, but
the books could not even be displayed beside the products that were described.
Nor could we legally tell people which products would do what.
It was another case where the FDA was performing a
balancing act between what us tax-paying consumers wanted and what the supplement
industry lobbyists wanted and how to provide both without endangering the
public's health. The “medical treatment” industry played a role too. The
pharmaceutical industry did not want people to resort to less expensive methods
that they could purchase from their relative or friend.
Their fiber supplement would have to compete with
prescription drugs on the open market, even though it was food. The company
chose to market it without letting consumers know how dramatically it produced
benefits, in favor of getting it on the market sooner. At first they called it
"Heart Plan.” But that was too much for the FDA also, so they ended up
changing the name.
Years previous, Stanford University did a clinical test on a fiber
supplement. The results of the test were astounding. They found that the fiber
supplement worked so well at reducing cholesterol that if they wanted to inform
the public of the benefits they would have to classify it as a drug and it
would be another 10 years before it would ever get to the open market, if it
was even accepted by the FDA at all.
As of 2000, part of the final ruling was that
products could explain potential benefits on the label, but there also has to
be a disclaimer stating: "These statements have not been evaluated by the
Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat,
cure or prevent any disease.”
Different kinds of vitamin supplements?
The National Academy of Sciences says, "The
various forms of Vitamin E need to be reevaluated to determine their relative
strength and make labels more understandable.”
"Vitamin E in capsule form, from soybeans
(concentrated food), has been found to be twice as effective as synthetic
versions from petroleum products.”
"Vitamin E from soybeans is called d-alpha.
The synthetic version is called dl-alpha. Additionally Vitamin E from
food can fall into any of eight different categories.” (can be called eight
different names and contain eight different beneficial types of Vitamin E).
"Nutritionists said, “…estimates of Vitamin E
are difficult to make and there are insufficient distinctions (among supplement
companies), among types of E.”
“Most nutrition data bases, as well as nutrition
labels do not distinguish among different types. Data is often measured in the
form of alpha-tocopherol equivalents.” (the real food form, yet the marketing
and distribution of synthetic versions refer to the standards of food Vitamin E
to support the use of synthetic Vitamin E).
.
"Because the various forms of Vitamin E are
not inter-convertable, it is recommended that relative biological potencies of
the various forms of E be reevaluated and researchers should report separately
on actual concentrations of each of the various Vitamin E forms.”
The best of science and the best of nature:
Next are some excerpts from an article ran on April
17, 2000 by The PR Newswire and A Seattle Newspaper.
In other words, E from food is twice as effective
as synthetic E. Vitamin E from food is what the people and books in the
nutrition industry are referring to when they say how much to consume, but
synthetic supplement manufacturers make cheaper, less potent and less effective
forms out of waste petroleum products and measure and label it as if it were
from food... they are not making distinctions between synthetic and food
concentrates and they do not convert the same in the body. Then, consumers on a
budget are mislead when comparing prices of synthetics to food concentrates.
That is one of the Reasons you may have not
received Results! before.
I remember a lady that had been experiencing
fibroid tumors in her breast. She would take the food concentrate Vitamin E and
they would go away. When she ran out, she would take the synthetic E and they
would come back. After a few times of this, she was convinced and stuck with
the food concentrate E.
If you have supplemented your diet with dietary
supplements of any kind in the past and got minimal or no Results, or even
negative side effects, here are just a few potential Reasons why...
How about you?
Would you say there is a difference?
- The Los Angeles Times ran a story about having 10 brands of St. John's Wort, a popular herb used for depression, tested. Seven out of ten had less key ingredients than promised on the label. Three had less than 50% of what was promised on the label.
- A study mentioned in The New York Times revealed they 60% of certain pure herbal supplements were so watered down that they were worthless.
- Consumer Labs, tested 30 brands of Ginko Biloba, a popular herb for memory and concentration, in August 1999. 25% had less key ingredients than promised on the label.
- Consumer Labs, tested 27 brands of Saw Palmetto, a popular herb for the prostate gland in men, in December 1999. Ten had less than the required beneficial ingredients. One had zero beneficial ingredients.
- Consumer Labs, tested 13 brands of SAM-E (S-adenosyl-methionene), in March 2000. Six had as much as 50% less than the label promised.
- Consumer Labs, tested 35 brands of calcium, in August 2000. Four contained less than the label. One had 53%, one had 61%, one had 82% and one had 91% of what the label promised.
- Consumer Labs, tested 22 brands of Ginseng, one of the most widely used herbal supplements in the world. Two, had 20 times the allowable amount of quintozene and or hexachlorobenzene (known poisons). Two had high lead content and seven had less than the required concentration on the active part of the plant.
- Dr. Bob Doster, who has worked in the food industry for years, tested 14 brands of B-Complex supplements right off the store shelves. Eleven of them did not contain what the label stated and or failed to be absorbable by the body.
- He also tested 63 different acidophilous supplements (pro-biotics / the good bacteria found in our intestines). Only 5% contained the amount of good bacteria the label claimed.
- In November 2013, several people on the Hawaiian Island of Oahu, suffered liver damage from a dietary supplement marketed as a weight loss supplement at GNC. At least one person died of liver failure.
- In 2014 a guest of Dr. Oz's show was fined $9 million for marketing a green tea dietary supplement which he represented as being tested, effective and safe. He also misrepresented himself as a physician.
John C. Reed MD An Arlington, Virginia physician
and Vice President of Media Affairs for American Wholehealth says, “Buy from a
reputable brand name supplement company that states assay the product for viable
organisms…Even if they correctly label it, it doesn’t mean healthy bacteria
actually end up living in your gut.”
Dallas Magazine had 40 products from five different stores independently tested. 50% did not meet label claims. Five had no active ingredients at all. Whole Foods Store brand had streptococcus bacteria in the pills.
Store Manager, Casey Rose, of
Fresh Market at Oak Lawn in Dallas said, "I have a lot of confidence in
Solgar (brand), since they have been in business since 1947... there are a
whole lot of reasons why I like them... they do not take short cuts in the
manufacturing... they're the Cadillac of the vitamin industry.”
In the testing,
Solgar performed the worst of all.
The following is an excerpt from an article in A
Seattle Newspaper, Sunday
March 19, 2000:
"In 1998, California investigators found that nearly one third of
260 herbal products contained lead, mercury and or diabetes drugs that were not
listed on the label.”
Pediatrician
Hillary Perr reported on children from wealthy California families who became
malnourished from eating snack foods that contained herbs. (The herbs, acting as stimulants to the body caused the bodies of the
children to use up nutrients, leaving them malnourished after eating the
“healthy snacks”).
A vitamin
supplement was recalled that contained folic acid, which
women take to reduce
the chances of having a baby with birth
defects,
because it contained only 35% of the amount claimed on the label.
APNewswire,
October 26, 1999. Olathe, Kansas. A high school football player collapsed on
the field after consuming "Ripped Fuel" a dietary herbal supplement
containing Ma Huang.
The April 2000 issue of Emergency Medicine reported about a 30 year old athlete who took androstenedione, a testosterone precursor. Touted as an “enhancer of athletic performance” his friend told him, "Those pills will help build muscle size.” He took it for seven days and by the time he was admitted to the emergency room he had been suffering for more than 30 hours with a painful, persistent erection. If untreated, tissue damage could have resulted. This condition is known as priapism.
Women's Sport
and Fitness Magazine ran an article entitled, Brave New Foods.
Jed Fahey, research associate at John Hopkins University School of Medicine
tested 20 brands of SGS (sulforphane glucosinolate), a known anti-tumor agent
found in broccoli. 15 of the 20 contained either no SGS or far less than the
label claimed.
You see, there is very little regulation
of the dietary supplement market.
Drugs, chemicals and contaminated products can be
on the market for years, even when they are causing deaths before the companies
or those responsible are shut down or products are pulled from the shelves.
Basically, anything can be labeled as a dietary
supplement and until there is proof that the product has been dangerous to
many, many people, business continues.
Labeling of dietary supplements often indicates,
incorrectly, that they meet standards set by the United States Pharmacopoeia.
However, the United States Pharmacopoeia does not verify that products bearing
the USP designation meet their standards of quality, and that includes promises
made about ingredients listed on the label. Most of the dietary supplement companies in existence today are nothing more than marketing and advertising companies, promoting the 'ideas' of health but lack enough integrity to actually improve health with the products they promote and have nothing to do with building health at the cellular level.
This is how some companies work: They figure out their target market, say... “weight loss” or “body building” then they hire a dietary supplement bottling company to put their label with implied benefits on the bottle. And then they start selling them. They are not necessarily effective or safe, there is very little regulation and too few people to enforce the laws that are in existence.
You see, the dietary supplement act allows
legitimate companies to share the facts about their products, but it also
allows the dishonest people time to make a ton of money until they are shut
down.
It is a buyer beware market. I have literally heard of companies that
first figure out how high their risk of losing a liability law suit is. Then
they figure out how much profit is at stake. Last on their priority list is
public safety. The way they look at is the very worst that can happen is that
they will be forced to close their business, then they just open up under a
different name.
By using certain supplements, you can have more
energy and at the same time be doing damage to your body. Nervous system
stimulant herbal formulas are in this category.
Paul
When Paul's son Daniel was about three years old he noticed his son seemed to have something wrong with his behavior. He took him to several doctors. At about age five and a half, one doctor diagnosed him as autistic and recommended medicating him. Paul's older son said, "Do not medicate him, his personality is too nice.”
When Paul's son Daniel was about three years old he noticed his son seemed to have something wrong with his behavior. He took him to several doctors. At about age five and a half, one doctor diagnosed him as autistic and recommended medicating him. Paul's older son said, "Do not medicate him, his personality is too nice.”
Paul got Daniel on some dietary supplements from
the store including the herb Ginko Biloba. The supplements were contaminated
and as a result, he went into anaphylactic shock. By this time his behavior was
getting worse including many phobias including the water. When people visited
Paul's home Daniel would hide under the table. He also became afraid of
other children including his brother. Within one month of beginning on food
concentrates the phobias went away. And he would jump off a 12 foot diving
platform into the pool and he was all over his brother, hugging and kissing him
and even talking to strangers. Although this case might sound too real to be
true, you know what they say about truth being stranger than fiction.
If you prefer to look on your own, go to my website
listed below. I guarantee you'll get better results than you have with any
other supplements you've ever used, or you get your money back. It's that
simple.
I do offer a 15% - 25% discount membership, which you will see on the website.
Enjoy!
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