Tuesday, April 1, 2008

What’s REALLY in Reliv?

The Following was taking from today's Dr. Mercola's Newsletter. I did not print the whole article about Vitamins as it was not prevalent but I did find his comments interesting.

Americans spend an estimated $21 billion a year on dietary supplements, and while I am not opposed to multivitamin supplements, as I personally now take one everyday, what many people do not realize is that it is up to the dietary supplement manufacturer to make sure their supplement is safe and effective, and that the label is truthful and not misleading.

Who Knows What’s REALLY in Your Supplement?

While you are relying on the vitamin company to provide you with a high-quality product, vitamin manufacturers typically rely on a “certificate of analysis” to confirm that their raw ingredients are safe and effective.

And where do you think they get this certificate of analysis? Directly from the supplier of their raw materials. There is currently no requirement to do an independent, third-party verification to validate that the raw materials in the supplements are what they say they are, or that they are in the stated amounts.

On top of that, making supplements is a highly complex process with a large number of steps -- and errors can occur at each and every one of these steps. Outside of the ingredients themselves, small oversights, human error, or cutting corners can lead to a supplement that is entirely substandard, or worse yet even dangerous.

So when it comes to choosing a supplement, weeding through your options can be like pulling a needle from a haystack. Even though you are well educated and have good intentions, if you are choosing your supplements on price alone, which is typical at a chain drugstore or large discount mart, there is a good chance that the supplement has not been verified through a rigorous quality control process. It is also likely made from primarily synthetic ingredients.

Remember the Meaning of “Supplement”

Supplement, of course, means IN ADDITION TO, not in place of. In the case of vitamin supplements that would be in addition to high-quality, unprocessed, whole foods, preferably raw and organic, diet. Personally, when I am not traveling I seek to have about 85 percent or more of my diet as raw food, and yes folks that includes my meat. But I only consume raw meat from the highest quality sources where there is virtually no risk of infection.

The moment you cook most food you lose a major element of its vitality. Very little is written about this in the United States, but in Europe the energetic element of food is more greatly appreciated. One example of this would be biophotons. And this is simply something that no supplement is going to provide you.

The only place you are going to get high-quality biophoton nutrition is from high-quality food sources.

Whole food sources also have the accessory micronutrients that may actually be providing more of the benefit than the precise nutrient you are seeking to supplement with. The classic example here is vitamin C or ascorbic acid. Is it useful? Certainly, without doubt. But it is far better if consumed with all of its accessory nutrients like bioflavonoids.

Drug Companies Did Get One Thing Right

As much as I hate to say it, this is one area where most of the drug companies have it right. They should certainly be given credit for one of the few areas that they exceed. Drug companies are under much higher quality assurance standards than vitamin companies and for the most part they do an excellent job of providing a product that is precisely what they say it is.

The problem, of course, is that most all drugs are synthetic and potentially toxic. They are nearly universally mere symptomatic band-aids that in no way, shape or form treat the cause of the disorder. And of course there is the occasional drug company that ignores the rules and produces inferior and sub-par products, but fortunately they are the rare minority.

The quality control issue will change in the United States at least, as very rigid standards have been adopted legislatively and depending on the size of the company, they will be under similar quality assurance standards in the next few years.

BUT, why wait till then?

Do Your Homework!!!

There are a number of high-quality manufacturers out there and you want to make sure that your company is following the ISO guidelines. For more details you can get a better idea by reviewing the information on the brand new multivitamin that we released earlier this year.

So if you are going to invest in a vitamin supplement, then for heaven’s sake do your homework! Take the time to ask the right questions, call the company or do independent research on the Net to confirm some of the issues I bring up in my new supplement page.

Why waste your money, and worse yet, risk causing you and your family members potential harm, by taking improperly made supplements?

Now, as for finding a high-quality supplement, there are several things to consider. First, you want one that is made from all-natural, non-synthetic, whole food ingredients. A high-quality supplement will also be free from additives and potential allergens.

Next, you need to make sure that the manufacturer is doing its job in finding quality raw ingredients, and during the manufacturing process. A good starting point is to ask for opinions for which companies are best at a reputable health food store, and also look for manufacturers that are ISO 9000, ISO 9001, or NSF certified. To gain these certifications a manufacturer will voluntarily submit to exhaustive -- and costly -- auditing of their processes to be sure they are superior.

The bottom line is this: your best choice for your nutrients is fresh, high-quality, unprocessed, whole and preferably raw food, plain and simple. But if you are looking for a bit of extra insurance, a truly all-natural supplement can sometimes be warranted.

Related Articles:

Are Vitamin Supplements a Bad Idea for Cancer Patients?

Are Vitamin Supplements Safe After All?

The Codex Conundrum and How it Affects Supplements in America

1 comment:

The_Reliv_Watchdog said...

Hello Poster - Sadly I deleted your post as the purpose of this site is for people to share their negative experiences with Reliv. There are too many positive sites and I want to give people a chance to make a balanced decision before joining.

Sadly I think you are being blinding by your own success. Yes while Reliv may help some people, I don't believe for a minute that it helps everyone without question. This is arrogant and sounds like every other Reliv Distributor. There is no such thing as a miracle cure. When I first joined Reliv myself, I contact a company called, All-One who has products like Reliv. They told me that their products have done as much good as Reliv in helping people but they are cheaper and they don't go around boasting about their success.

And the research about Soy is very well proven. It's blind stupidity to ignore it. I hope you will take the time to search it out for yourself before you push your products on someone who may be hurt.

Our friend who took Reliv is dying. Right now only has days or maybe a couple of weeks left. And it's the soy in Reliv that is responsible. You can't tell me there is nothing wrong with Soy. I have seen it myself and I know it's bad.

Anyway, I am sorry I had to delete your post but this is not a place to post positive stories. This can be done elsewhere.