And since it has been a while since this link has been posted in an HN comment, and since commenters here have mentioned that they haven't even read the fine submitted article, much less the underlying study publication, I'll repost here a link to a classic article by Peter Norvig (LISP hacker who is now Google's director of research) on how to interpret scientific studies and analyze study designs.
Suffice it to say that studies of human nutrition are HARD. A faultless study design would have to have dictatorial power to observe patient behavior over the long term, measuring exactly absolutely everything that a patient eats. The study design of the study reported in the submitted article is basically the best kind of study design for a longitudinal study that will pass institutional review for study of human subjects and not bankrupt the researchers with its expense. The researchers have made best current efforts to reduce flaws in the study design to the utmost extent possible, and acknowledge what they don't know (because they can't infer it from the study design) in their publications and comments to the press.
I encourage everyone to read the conclusions. (And they're actual conclusions! Not just a summary! Yes, that makes me so excited as to warrant three exclamation marks!)
Excellent comment and conclusion and should be a mandatory read after the nyt article, really, because the newspaper story draws (or suggests) a conclusion that isn't really there.
It's worth noting that they're describing the effects of high doses of vitamins. Given the average modern diet (at least, for Americans like me), vitamins may be necessary to achieve "normal" doses.
I take a fiber supplement (which, I know, is not a vitamin) because I try to avoid refined carbohydrates, which tends to mean I have to avoid carbohydrates altogether except when making a home-cooked meal. Since the average adult male around my age/weight needs ~28g of fiber a day, and I probably consume 15g or less, the 6g supplement seems prudent. Anecdotally, my ... er, system ... seems to work better that way.
Also important is that they are not describing the effects of high doses of all vitamins. Superfluous amounts of Vitamin E seem to be mainly what they are seeing negative results from, and you'd probably only be getting that much Vitamin E if you were taking Vitamin E-specific supplements on purpose.
This type health news confuse people; everything we think will make us healthy is later claimed as an unhealthy exercise in some other research, should we distrust health news in mainstream media totally?
Exactly, most vitamins are dietary supplements and not meant as wonder drugs. What the article fails to mention is the hazards of being deficient in any of these things and how easy with a modern diet it is to be deficient.
That's a study I would like to see: how deficient people's diets actually are. I hear many claims about this, but never heard of any systematic attempts to verify it.
> I take a fiber supplement (which, I know, is not a vitamin) because I try to avoid refined carbohydrates
I clamped down on useless carbs altogether. Bread, potatoes, rice, popcorn, soda, etc - either eliminated or greatly reduced. I eat fruits as much as I want. Fiber issue - solved.
> Anecdotally, my ... er, system ... seems to work better that way.
I haven't read the original study, but might they not be mixing together cause and effect here? Instead of taking vitamins causing people to get sick, it might be people with riskier genetics/lifestyles are more likely to take vitamins to hedge against that?
Reminds me of a news article that interpreted statistics to say "People who drink low fat milk are fatter! Clearly this means that low fat milk makes you fat!" instead of the obvious conclusion that people who are fat would drink low fat milk to try to get slimmer.
I'm sick of this hand-wavey selective nonsense. Yes, healthy people with good diets probably shouldn't be taking any vitamins, but the people I know who are this healthy are a small minority, including myself.
Lets look at these cases specfically. Should women over the age of 50 take iron? Probably not, but why are they taking iron? Because they've been told their whole lives they're low on iron by their doctors, who were right to tell them so, but now know not to recommend iron pills past a certain age. Were they wrong for doing so?
Look at how foods are enriched with vitamins. Folic acid is everywhere because it helps pregnant women, but in men it can cause cancer, but it also might fight a different cancer, yet we still take it in. Its nearly impossible to buy bread from the store that doesn't have folic acid. Hell, half the things in the grocery store are enriched with folic acid. How about we pull that stuff and just tell pregnant women to take supplements and stop feeding men a carcinogen? I prefer the freedom to make my own decisions than having the government dictate folic acid supplementation via food and the other hand having the NYTimes telling me not to take anything.
For the record I take fiber, fish oil, and vitamin D + tryptophan. The latter being more or less a cure for my SAD (after several failed SSRIs). This combination makes me feel like a million dollars. With a little supplementation as well as good sleep, etc I'm about 10x as creative and have more energy. Quitting these would be foolish. If anything, we should be encouraging responsible and informed supplementation and pulling government mandated supplementation for things that harm us, folic acid especially.
Heck, I'm a big government kind of guy, and even I have a problem with folic acid in our food. The government, even under the best of circumstances, is biased towards pregnant women and families (population growth/family is seen as important) but really not interested in helping you achieve longevity or be happy. You're going to have to work those out on your own, hence my recommendation to look into potential supplements and lifestyle changes, as well as avoiding government supplementation that might hurt you (folic acid) but help others (pregnant women).
This article is so against the hacker ethos its not even funny. Sorry NYTimes, this issue is a lot more complex than "Vitamins bad, mmm'kay?"
I don't want to discredit your experiences, because if they work, they work, but have you considered the possibility that you're achieving a placebo effect with your supplements? In some studies, iirc, placebos have been shown to be as effective or more effective than SSRIs.
In some studies, iirc, placebos have been shown to be as effective or more effective than SSRIs.
You wrote, "if I remember correctly," so I'll mention here some sources I have checked recently for other Hacker News threads. In actual practice, placebos only look effective when the statistical tests in a study are poor, and most especially when the symptoms are self-reported by patients. Placebos are NOT effective in treating actual disease states or improving "hard endpoints" such as reduction of all-cause mortality or major morbidity from specific diseases with verifiable physiological signs. See
Placebo effects are strongest for patient self-reported subjective symptoms (classically, pain, but in more recent studies mood) and weakest for objective clinical signs measured by experienced observers. Hard endpoints to look at in the case of depression include preventing suicide and the patient returning to normal daily life function (such as full-time employment if that is appropriate for the patient's stage of life). Some hard endpoint studies indeed do not support some brands of SSRIs as well as they support cognitive-behavioral talk therapy for depression, but no properly designed study says that placebos are "effective" for any indication for SSRIs. Thanks for bringing up this issue, which is recurrent on HN, here.
There is a huge range of placebo effectiveness. Placebo's that cause side effects work better than those that don't. Placebo's handed to you by people in lab coats work better than people in normal attire etc.
Also, while placebo's have little effect on cancer or broken bones they do show significant and measurable effects with increased immune response, reduce pain, reduce signs of depression and a host of other things.
PS: This get's really complected there is even evidence that many anti deprecation work on the side effect and only show up as better than 'placebo' when the placebo's have no side effects.
Of course, its impossible for me to run a proper experiment on myself with the study and control group of the same guy, but you are free to research the mood changing qualities of both tryptophan and vitamin D as well as fish oil on your own. Legitimate studies have found effect.
I listened to NPR talk about this study yesterday. They explained that men taking a normal does of Vitamin E are NOT at a higher risk for prostate cancer. Men taking what they described as a "mega dose" are. The conclusion is don't take more than the recommended amount, vitamins can be harmful if you take too much. Don't do that.
Exactly. When starting any supplement, it's worth spending ten minutes to look up what conventional (read: conservative, which is exactly what you want here) medicine considers the maximum daily dose, side effects, overdose symptoms, and toxicity levels.
This isn't rocket science, but I am glad the research is being done. It seems obvious that eating whole foods is the best way to get your vitamins and minerals. First of all we have millions of years of consumption of whole foods, so our microbiotic gut systems are well tuned to them. Supplements are fairly new evolutionarily. The specific form of compounds is extremely important as noted here:
No explanation is given why any supplement is unhealthy. That's the first thing.
Secondly, the context in which this occurs is that various government agencies and professional guilds want to prohibit the sale of supplements, or impose ridiculous 'standards' on their manufacture and testing.
However, it's very important that people remain free to choose which non-prescription chemicals to put in their bodies. Medics and pharmacists don't always get it right, they are difficult to consult, and they are as subject to whim and fashion in their thinking as other professions.
Meanwhile, only a handful of people die annually from vitamin overdose, whereas hundreds of thousands people die who take prescription drugs (yet we don't say that there's no justification for prescription drugs).
I hope you're trolling but on the assumption that you're not:
> No explanation is given why any supplement is unhealthy. That's the first thing.
An extreme example to illustrate the point: if you eat a random plant and drop dead, I'm not going to look for an explanation, I'm going to avoid eating that plant until I can prove that your death was caused by another factor. Likewise, if taking vitamin supplements appears to result in a negative effect on overall health rather than the expected positive, the smart thing to do is stop taking them until you can demonstrate otherwise, is it not?
> Secondly, the context in which this occurs is that various government agencies and professional guilds want to prohibit the sale of supplements, or impose ridiculous 'standards' on their manufacture and testing.
Source for this?
> However, it's very important that people remain free to choose which non-prescription chemicals to put in their bodies.
Indeed, it's also important that people are well educated in the effects of those non-prescription chemicals and are in full possession of the known facts about their effects. Such is the aim of studies like this.
> Medics and pharmacists don't always get it right, they are difficult to consult, and they are as subject to whim and fashion in their thinking as other professions.
Maybe so, but they know a lot more about the human body than those who don't study it, since that is by definition their job. Besides, the great thing about science is that anyone can dive in and have a go at proving or disproving something so if you disagree with the conclusions in this article, run some research of your own and prove them wrong.
> Meanwhile, only a handful of people die annually from vitamin overdose, whereas hundreds of thousands people die who take prescription drugs (yet we don't say that there's no justification for prescription drugs).
Sources for either of those statements?
Your issue with prescription drug-taking is entirely separate; you might as well argue that thousands of people die driving yet we don't say there's no justification for driving.
>An extreme example to illustrate the point: if you eat a random plant and drop dead, I'm not going to look for an explanation, I'm going to avoid eating that plant until I can prove that your death was caused by another factor.
Even if the plant extended my life? Isn't trying to understand why I died the same thing as looking for an explanation?
Any studies which merely correlate supplementation with early death and then ‘conclude’ that supplements are bad can be refuted by saying that the relevant people in spite of supplementatation and not because of it.
>> Secondly, the context in which this occurs is that various government agencies and professional guilds want to prohibit the sale of supplements, or impose ridiculous 'standards' on their manufacture and testing.
>> However, it's very important that people remain free to choose which non-prescription chemicals to put in their bodies.
>Indeed, it's also important that people are well educated in the effects of those non-prescription chemicals and are in full possession of the known facts about their effects. Such is the aim of studies like this.
Like I said, the article gave no explanation for why any supplement or supplements in general are bad. So there's no scientific or educational value.
Since the freedom to take supplements is presently at risk, the article can only do harm.
>Maybe so, but they know a lot more about the human body than those who don't study it, since that is by definition their job.
Yes, doctors do know more about the body than most people but that doesn't make them infallible. Part of recognising our fallibility means not relying on any one source of expertise. If doctors and government took that seriously then they wouldn't be trying to restrict non-prescription items. The government's job is to protect our freedoms. Doctors can learn from ordinary people's experiences of supplementation.
>the great thing about science is that anyone can dive in and have a go at proving or disproving something
But he can't if the relevant supplements are banned!
Note also that, generally speaking, science thrives in an atmosphere of freedom and toleration.
>if you disagree with the conclusions in this article, run some research of your own and prove them wrong.
There's nothing to test from this article: it doesn't assert anything. It merely insinuates that supplements are bad. Science is about searching for explanations. It's not about counting studies or weighing evidence or anything like that.
>> Meanwhile, only a handful of people die annually from vitamin overdose, whereas hundreds of thousands people die who take prescription drugs (yet we don't say that there's no justification for prescription drugs).
> Your issue with prescription drug-taking is entirely separate; you might as well argue that thousands of people die driving yet we don't say there's no justification for driving
I don't have an issue with prescription drugs, but note the car driving argument is precisely what is being put forward with regard to supplements.
http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/index.php/vitamins-and-m...
And since it has been a while since this link has been posted in an HN comment, and since commenters here have mentioned that they haven't even read the fine submitted article, much less the underlying study publication, I'll repost here a link to a classic article by Peter Norvig (LISP hacker who is now Google's director of research) on how to interpret scientific studies and analyze study designs.
http://norvig.com/experiment-design.html
Suffice it to say that studies of human nutrition are HARD. A faultless study design would have to have dictatorial power to observe patient behavior over the long term, measuring exactly absolutely everything that a patient eats. The study design of the study reported in the submitted article is basically the best kind of study design for a longitudinal study that will pass institutional review for study of human subjects and not bankrupt the researchers with its expense. The researchers have made best current efforts to reduce flaws in the study design to the utmost extent possible, and acknowledge what they don't know (because they can't infer it from the study design) in their publications and comments to the press.