Curious what you think of this from zionist press

EustaceBagge

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Well, considering a lot of women take iron supplements which are very unhealthy compared to natural sources like liver the article makes sense. Imagine vegans loading up on b-vitamins expecting to become healthier while not supplementing the co-factors those b-vitamins come with in nature. Supplements are supplements, not replacements.

But in today's climate with soil void of nutrients a multivitamin or some vitamin supplementation is healthy. That is just my opinion though.
 

geusterman

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As a Zionist and after reading the article I would say it’s worthy of attention. There’s no reason for fear. Cancer always has its own workarounds. Always keep your antivirals handy for cancer. Just my opinion.
 

Kimster

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LA

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Many newspapers are using human interest stories to help promote their online newspapers to try to keep their businesses alive without using bot (AI) writers. Often the same "breaking news" appears on various online newspapers simultaneously

These came out about the same time and the sources appear to be similar or the same in different formats.
For example:

[view:]Taking dietary supplements full of antioxidants could actually help cancerous tumors grow

[view:}New study shows antioxidants stimulate blood flow in tumors

There was another I saw someplace around that time and I 'seem to remember' that it was on the text version of the UKdailymail.
It did not cite sources so I didnt save the link

The articles linked to studies that 'seem' similar
[view:]JCI - Antioxidants stimulate BACH1-dependent tumor angiogenesis

[view:]Antioxidants stimulate blood flow in tumours

Here is an almost identical scare tactic published in the year 2015, by the The Guardian. Supposedly the Guardian is or was funded by Bill Gates.

[view:]Vitamin supplements can increase risk of cancer and heart disease

The Guardian Article included this link:

{view:]Dietary Supplements Shown to Increase Cancer Risk

Multivitamins on sale. The University of Colorado study was presented to the American Association for Cancer Research at the weekend.
Photograph: Alamy

Health
* This article is more than 8 years old

Vitamin supplements can increase risk of cancer and heart disease

Researchers reviewing trials involving thousands of patients say taking extra vitamins and minerals does more harm than good

Matthew Weaver
Tue 21 Apr 2015 06.12 EDT
Last modified on Wed 20 Sep 2017 14.52 EDT

Dietary supplements, such as over-the-counter multivitamins, do “more harm than good” and can increase the risk of developing cancer and heart disease, according to research in the US.

The study by the University of Colorado, which reviewed several trials involving thousands of patients over a decade, showed that those who took extra vitamins and minerals were more likely to have health problems.

Taking more than the recommended dosage beta carotene – a supplement advertised as a boost to the immune system – was found to increase the risk of developing lung cancer and heart disease by up to 20%, according to the university.

The review also noted that a trial involving a folic acid supplement, which is thought to reduce precancerous polyps in the colon, actually increased the number of polyps among users compared with those who received a placebo.

Prof Tim Byers, associate director for cancer prevention at the university’s cancer centre, said: “We have discovered that taking extra vitamins and minerals do more harm than good. We found that the supplements were actually not beneficial for their health. In fact, some people actually got more cancer while on the vitamins.” He presented the findings to the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research at the weekend.

The research raises serious questions about the efficacy of the dietary supplement market, which is worth almost £400m in Britain, according to research in 2012. Products sold frequently involve several times more than the recommended daily dosages of the vitamins and minerals involved.

Byers said it was unclear why the supplements increased health risks, but he warned consumers against consuming more than the recommended dose. Taking the correct dosage was harmless but “no substitute for good, nutritional food”, he said. Those who ate fresh fruit and vegetables were less likely to get cancer.

He explained that dietary supplements showed promising results when they were first tested on animals, but these had not replicated in longer-term studies on humans. “We are not sure why this is happening at the molecular level but evidence shows that people who take more dietary supplements than needed tend to have a higher risk of developing cancer,” he said.

Research by the Food Standards Agency in 2008 estimated that one in three Britons took some form of dietary supplement and half of all households with children gave them vitamins or minerals.

Byers said his study showed there were public health issues with such supplements and urged authorities to “pay more attention to safety and how they are advertised”.
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Last edited:
EMF Mitigation - Flush Niacin - Big 5 Minerals

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